Love Triangle: How Trigonometry Shapes the World

Love Triangle: How Trigonometry Shapes the World

by Matt Parker

Narrated by Matt Parker

Unabridged

Love Triangle: How Trigonometry Shapes the World

Love Triangle: How Trigonometry Shapes the World

by Matt Parker

Narrated by Matt Parker

Unabridged

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Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on August 20, 2024

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Overview

An ode to triangles, the shape that makes our lives possible
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Trigonometry is perhaps the most essential concept humans have ever devised. The simple yet versatile triangle allows us to record music, map the world, launch rockets into space, and be slightly less bad at pool. Triangles underpin our day-to-day lives and civilization as we know it.
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In Love Triangle, Matt Parker argues we should all show a lot more love for triangles, along with all the useful trigonometry and geometry they enable. To prove his point, he uses triangles to create his own digital avatar, survive a harrowing motorcycle ride, cut a sandwich, fall in love, measure tall buildings in a few awkward bounds, and make some unusual art. Along the way, he tells extraordinary and entertaining stories of the mathematicians, engineers, and philosophers-starting with Pythagoras-who dared to take triangles seriously.
*
This is the guide you should have had in high school-a lively and definitive answer to “Why do I need to learn about trigonometry?” Parker reveals triangles as the hidden pattern beneath the surface of the contemporary world. Like love, triangles actually are all around. And in the air. And they're all you need.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

06/10/2024

“We all rely on triangles to keep our modern world ticking along,” according to this disappointing paean. Parker (Humble Pi), a comedian and former math teacher who runs the Stand-up Maths YouTube channel, notes that video game graphics are composed of countless tiny triangles because they can be computed more quickly than other shapes and that civil engineers favor triangular support structures because they’re reliably rigid (“Three side-lengths can only form one triangle,” whereas rectangles can transform into any number of parallelograms if their sides shift). Parker sometimes strays from his subject, as when he devotes a lengthy passage to chronicling the decades-long hunt for “a polygon which could perfectly cover a surface but in a way which never repeats” on the slim premise that he thinks the solution, a 13-sided shape discovered in 2023, bears a vague resemblance to an equilateral triangle. Other discussions get mired in mathematical minutiae, such as when he breaks down how to use the sine function to determine the size of a U.S. military satellite’s telescope mirror based on information gleaned from a photograph the satellite took of an Iranian rocket launch site. Puerile puns peppered throughout don’t help (he suggests that manufacturing triangular windows is a “real pane in the glass”). This misses the mark. Agent: PJ Mark, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (Aug.)

From the Publisher

Praise for Love Triangle

"A rare book about math sure to make you smile, despite your feelings about the subject. Once again, Parker measures up." Kirkus Reviews

"Parker has a fine old time with his material, and only a curmudgeon could fail to be charmed." The Telegraph (UK)

“Matt Parker has made me laugh about math many times by showing just how weird it can get. He’s also made me cry about math by showing how transcendently beautiful it is.” —Adam Savage, MythBusters co-host and author of Every Tool’s a Hammer

Love Triangle is a blissful blend of pure science and pure merriment. Edifying, entertaining, excellent!” —Alex James, food writer and Blur bass player
 
“Fine. Triangles are now my favorite shape.” —Hannah Fry, author of Hello World


Praise for Matt Parker and his books


“Parker is consistently very funny . . . highly entertaining.” The Guardian
 
“[Humble Pi is] a fascinating and deeply surprising journey into the hilarious and sometimes tragic realm of mathematical error. Brilliant.” —Tim Harford, author of The Undercover Economist and Messy

“Fun, informative, and relentlessly entertaining, Humble Pi is a charming and very readable guide to some of humanity’s all-time greatest miscalculations.” —Ryan North, author of How to Invent Everything

Things to Make and Do in the Fourth Dimension shows off math at its most playful and multifarious.” —Jordan Ellenberg, author of How Not to Be Wrong

“Matt Parker is some sort of unholy fusion of prankster, wizard, and brilliant nerd—math is rarely this clever, funny, and ever so slightly naughty.” —Adam Rutherford, author of A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived

Kirkus Reviews

2024-05-17
A thorough explanation of triangles by the popular Australian mathematician, comedian, and bestselling author of Humble Pi.

“Triangles are everything,” Parker writes in the introduction, “and everything is triangles.” The following 10 chapters bear titles like “Going the Distance,” “Getting Triggy With It,” and “Making Waves.” Within his exploratory and everyday applications of triangles, the author describes rounding corners on a racetrack (“the bike did lean just over 45° from vertical. Which means I can officially name my new motorbike gang Hell’s Angles”), playing pool (“it’s hard to find a more common or more practical use of angles and geometry”), and looking at rainbows, which, he explains, are not arches but circles. Parker delineates myriad laws and patterns, and history as well as recent news. One example of the latter is the March 2023 discovery of the first aperiodic monotile, dubbed “the Hat.” “Given this shape had been eluding the entire mathematics community for over half a century,” Parker writes, “nobody expected it to be so straightforward.” The author has a gift for making somewhat tedious topics not only comprehensible and absorbing, but also great fun. As one example, he refers to Pythagoras (“the granddaddy of triangle maths”) as “the Beyoncé of maths” because “who cares about his last name.” Parker’s tireless enthusiasm, light touch, and inviting manner make for a reading experience akin to a visit to Epcot Center, led by a guide in possession of childlike wonder in addition to adult acumen and humor. The author never gets mired in the weeds, even as he manages to cover a tremendous amount of detailed information, aided by illustrations that feature appealing captions running the gamut from simple to complex.

A rare book about math sure to make you smile, despite your feelings about the subject. Once again, Parker measures up.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940159459213
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 08/20/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
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