Humble Pi

Math Series

Author: Matt Parker

Book 2 in the Math series

Pages: 314

Published: 2019

Age: 12+

The book-length answer to anyone who ever put their hand up in math class and asked, “When am I ever going to use this in the real world?”

“Fun, informative, and relentlessly entertaining, Humble Pi is a charming and very readable guide to some of humanity's all-time greatest miscalculations—that also gives you permission to feel a little better about some of your own mistakes.” —Ryan North, author of 'How to Invent Everything'

Our whole world is built on math, from the code running a website to the equations enabling the design of skyscrapers and bridges. Most of the time this math works quietly behind the scenes . . . until it doesn’t. All sorts of seemingly innocuous mathematical mistakes can have significant consequences.

Math is easy to ignore until a misplaced decimal point upends the stock market, a unit conversion error causes a plane to crash, or someone divides by zero and stalls a battleship in the middle of the ocean.

Exploring and explaining a litany of glitches, near misses, and mathematical mishaps involving the internet, big data, elections, street signs, lotteries, the Roman Empire, and an Olympic team, Matt Parker uncovers the bizarre ways math trips us up, and what this reveals about its essential place in our world. Getting it wrong has never been more fun.

About the Math Series

Books in series order

  1. 1.Things to Make and Do in the Fourth Dimension(2014)
  2. 2.Humble Pi(2019)

Reading age: 12+ years

This series explores the very math that strikes fear into most students. Using his stand-up, comedic humour and an obvious enjoyment in the intricacies of mathematics, Matt Parker reassuringly explains why math isn't natural for humans. He lightly traverses from the foundations of math and demystifying formulas, to stories of dramatic mathematical errors and its many interesting - and yes, useful! - applications in the real world.

Whether you're struggling to connect with mathematics, or enthralled by its challenges, the books in this series will not only prove that the door to math never closes, but that it can be thrown wide open.