How to Teach Physics to Your Dog: Obsessive Update

i-1e8ca3d6f1057cdc4f9532702467bc29-sm_cover_draft_atom.jpg Today's miscellaneous information about How to Teach Physics to your Dog:

-- Following on yesterday's discussion about Barnes & Noble, which seems to have numerous in-store copies everywhere but New England, where I am, it's not some system-wide issue-- B&N stores have a healthy number of copies, and have sold a pretty reasonable number of them already. It's probably just a matter of shelving/ distribution associated with the holidays.

-- I couldn't really be the only blogger to think of connecting dogs and physics, and, indeed, I'm not. A bloodhound in Manhattan named Wimsey offers his take on Newton's Laws:

In fact, I have recently uncovered a new translation of Newton's famous three laws compiled by my ancestor Euclid Wimsey:

Newton's First Law: Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it.

Translation of Newton's First Law: When in a park a Hound tends to remain in a park unless dragged out baying furiously by several strong humans.

All three laws are discussed, along with an instructive example. and, as a bonus, you get some illuminating historical anecdots regarding the US Civil War.

-- Current sales rank is hovering in the 2,000-3,000 range, which isn't bad at all.

-- The book was deemed "very funny by someone at the Examiner. Which is a little dangerous-- at dinner one time, one of my sister's friends said "You know, your brother is pretty funny." "I know," she replied. "The problem is, he knows it, too."

And that's what I've got today on the book front. SteelyKid is home with a fever, which probably means no more substantive blogging for me today. If you need something to read, though, I do have a suggestion...

More like this

I've been enjoying Tom Levenson's "Diary of a Trade Book" series quite a bit (the latest post is on cover art), so when I say a stack of copies of
Over at Pure Pedantry, Kara has a nice post on Goethe and game theory.
We kicked off the countdown to Newton's birthday with his second law of motion, which is almost but not quite everything you need to understand and predict the motion of objects.
Greatest Physicists #1 - Isaac Newton

I went to Borders, they didn't have it. I ordered it to be shipped free to my house. Congrats on your publication. I hope my purchase bumps it up a few on the best sellor list. If you go on a book-signing tour near Hartford CT, let me know, and of course, bring your dog.
I recently got my physics degree at the tender age of 50.

By jeff ogren (not verified) on 29 Dec 2009 #permalink

You're in New England? And you teach at Union? I bet you're a Yankee fan.