A hilarious, trivia-filled survey of the past twelve months by the team behind the award-winning podcast, No Such Thing As A Fish
No Such Thing as a Fish is a team of researchers who work on the
BBC TV show QI. Each week they gather together in their Covent
Garden office and record a podcast discussing the most interesting
facts they've discovered over the previous seven days.
In the five years since it launched, the show has been downloaded
more than 200 million times, won multiple awards, been transformed
into the spin-off topical BBC Two TV series No Such Thing as the
News, performed national and international tours (including selling
out the Hammersmith Apollo and the Sydney Opera House along the
way), and was named one of iTunes' top 10 most downloaded podcasts
of 2016, 2017 and 2018.
The team is made up of James Harkin, Andrew Hunter Murray, Anna
Ptaszynski and Dan Schreiber.
James is a script editor on QI, with a dozen series and seven
bestselling books under his belt. He has also appeared on TV quiz
shows Fifteen to One and Only Connect, reaching the semi-finals in
the latter and embarrassingly crashing out of the former.
Andrew is a writer and comedian who also contributes to Private Eye
magazine. His first novel, The Last Day, will be published in
spring 2020. His nickname among No Such Thing as a Fish fans is
'Lightning' (or so he claims).
Anna is a script editor on QI who has previously worked in Scottish
politics and Australian advertising, as well as selling fruit wine
and hay-baling in the Highlands. She refuses to join Twitter.
#GetAnnaOnTwitter
Dan is a comedian and producer who co-created the award-winning BBC
Radio 4 series The Museum of Curioisty; has fronted numerous TV
shows, including his own Channel 4 documentary; and, as a stand-up,
saw his debut show named at the time as one of the top 100 most
favourably reviewed shows of the Edinburgh Fringe. He ranked 100th.
Jolly, packed with impressive and silly facts . . . hooray for No
Such Thing As A Fish.
*Observer*
Knowledge-packed and riotously funny.
*The Times*
A factually relevant look at a baffling 12 months.
*iNews*
It’s fair to say the podcast has been “quite” successful. Its
episodes have been listened to more than 100 million times, with
1.5 million new streams every month . . . The Book of the Year [is]
a compendium of topical facts in 365 categories. It’s laced with
their dry wit, and likely to end up in many a pub-quizzer’s
Christmas stocking.
*Daily Telegraph*
[No Such Thing As A Fish] drop so many facts your head will
spin!
*Guardian*
No Such Thing As A Fish is the hit podcast presented by the funny
guys and girls at QI . . . The Book of the Year shares all of the
lesser known facts from the year of 2017.
*Steve Wright, BBC Radio 2*
Brilliant and funny . . . educational as well as entertaining. A
rare but valuable combination.
*Huffington Post*
Hugely enjoyable . . . this tome is just right: deadpan, sharp and
disarmingly offbeat.
*Event*
If you love funny facts as much as we love funny facts then you
should get your funny fact-loving faces in front of The Book of the
Year.
*Comedy Central (via @ComedyCentralUK)*
QI is such an institution that even the programme’s researchers are
taking over the world. Fully justified that is too, as anyone who’s
heard their podcast, No Such Thing As A Fish, will confirm. It’s
packed with killer facts – and so is this book.
*Daily Mail*
Absolutely ideal for the Christmas holidays.
*Mark Radcliffe, BBC Radio 6*
A bumper anthology of ridiculous but true facts from the anoraks
(and QI researchers) behind hit podcast No Such Thing As A
Fish.
*Metro*
Bitesize chunks of truth in a year of fake news. If you love
fact-based trivia, you'll get a kick out of this.
*Irish Times*
Since 2003, the Elves have unearthed countless weird and wonderful
truths and gems of general ignorance for QI, their
100-million-times-downloaded weekly podcast No Such Thing as A
Fish, topical TV spin-off No Such Thing as the News and their many
books, such as their newly released Book of the Year.
*Radio Times*
Expect to be amazed.
*Daily Telegraph*
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