Product Description
Most people know a nerd when they see one but can't define just what a nerd is. American Nerd: The Story of My People gives us the history of the concept of nerdiness and of the subcultures we consider nerdy. What makes Dr. Frankenstein the archetypal nerd? Where did the modern jock come from? When and how did being a self-described nerd become trendy? As the nerd emerged, vaguely formed, in the nineteenth century, and popped up again and again in college humor journals and sketch comedy, our culture obsessed over the designation.Mixing research and reportage with autobiography, critically acclaimed writer Benjamin Nugent embarks on a fact-finding mission of the most entertaining variety. He seeks the best definition of nerd and illuminates the common ground between nerd subcultures that might seem unrelated: high-school debate team kids and ham radio enthusiasts, medieval reenactors and pro-circuit Halo players. Why do the same people who like to work with computers also enjoy playing Dungeons & Dragons? How are those activities similar? This clever, enlightening book will appeal to the nerd (and antinerd) that lives inside all of us.
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Term Paper
Unless you enjoy reading dry comparative analysis papers not unlike term papers in college, this book is not for you. I struggled through the first 60 pages only to give up as it didn't become enjoyable or even relevent. I usually enjoy non-fiction, but this was simply an elaborated research paper.
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Problematic, but still worth a read ( speak04 )
I had a bit of a hard time with this book. While parts of it were completely fascinating and I learned some interesting new information, there were parts of it that were very dull. It didn't help that it read like a stream of consciousness exercise in it's organizational scheme. It skipped back and forth between the history of nerds in America and personal stories from the author's own life, often without much transition between the two types of stories. This kind of writing can be very successful (Stefen Fatsis' excellent book Word Freak comes to mind), but the author doesn't quite make it work here. The book then ends with a personal story, why Nugent gave up being a nerd. This makes one question why he wrote a book about nerds. Is he fascinated with nerds since he used to be one? Does he miss being a nerd? Does he consider himself a nerd once again (which isn't ever addressed in the book)? Why does he call it The Story of My People when he makes it clear that he gave up being a nerd? The ending is quite confusing and really detracts from the rest of the book. Nugent clearly IS a nerd, but he apparently pretended so successfully that he wasn't that he was accepted by the non-nerd community; this make you question the validity of the text, like he might be hiding something from the reader as he hid his nerdiness from his peers as a teen.
The dust jacket makes the book sound completely fascinating, but I felt it was too short to be a good history of nerds in America (the author really glossed over several points rather than delving in deeply where I felt he should have - a true nerd would have gone into more detail!) and it had too much historical information to be a good memoir. Nugent really needed to make up his mind and go with one or the other format because including both made the book seem, at times, overly whimsical or poorly researched. I definitely got something out of the book and find myself telling other people the information I learned from reading it, especially my fellow nerds, but it just wasn't all it could be.
I guess it didn't help that I don't agree with the author's definition of "nerd" either. What he wrote about in the memoir sections of the book (boffing, playing D&D, etc) were really more "geeky" and less "nerdy" by my definitions for the two terms. Nugent really didn't address the distinction, or even acknowledge the differences, which disappointed me. I believe I am a nerd because I am obsessive about topics that make me an outsider, but I'm geek too because I love Star Wars and Lord of the Rings. Many people are both nerds and geeks, so it's easy to see where mistakes may be made and why lumping the two groups together might make sense. This lumping could even happen unconsciously to some people. Still, as a person who claims to be a nerd (again, he only really says he USED to be a nerd), you'd think he'd be anal enough to know the difference.
Overall, I found the book reasonably interesting, but I feel it had more problems than positive points. If you're seriously nerdy, this book will likely appeal to you. Based on reviews I've read, this is the demographic the author's book is appealing to anyway. However, if you're looking for historical information or even a memoir of a young nerd, this isn't enough of either to satisfy your needs and you would be better off looking elsewhere.
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Disappointing ( primail )
I purchased the book following a positive review in Scientific America. Unfortunately I found it to be mainly historical observation and hypothesizing, rather than what I hoped would be a researched analysis.
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A for Effort. C for Execution. Too, um, clinical ( misplacedlonghorn )
In short, I was moderately disappointed in this book. I gave it a 3rd star simply because I sympathize to some extent with the object of the book: the nerd. I was not a nerd in school, but I am definitely a geek. As another reviewer noted, the author did a substandard job in delineating the differences between geeks, nerds, dorks, etc.
Overall, the book was not an enjoyable read. It came off as too academic. I enjoy serious, academic books most of the time, but did not buy this book with that expectation in mind.
What someone needs to write is a real geek memoir, not this ethnographic treatise. Perhaps that someone will be me.
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Missed Opportunity ( ghedi2000 )
Although one of of the more interesting & layered treatments of nerds, the book falls short of its promise. It can't quite decide whether it wants to be a memoir or a cultural genealogy of nerds. In the end, it offers too little of both & left me wanting to read more. Definitely worth reading & a breezy read.
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