Customer Reviews
QI - Quite Interesting and quite informative, really! - By: Reddysetgo, 14 Oct 2008 
As an Australian fan of QI, but still catching up on the publications, I'm a recent reader of a few QI books. The QI Annual brought back meories of the annuals of my childhood, but without the daft makeup tips & silly advice on boys! The QI Annual doesn't aim to be a deadly serious tome full of staid facts & figures, the QI team have done a fabulous jobin making the books informative yet fun. I've read the Annual several times, yet I always manage to find something interesting I didn't see earlier. Great for trivia buffs & myth exploders, or anyone who has a fascination for interesting tidbits. A great companion to the show, & a must for all QI Fans.
I already have the QI Annual 2009 on pre-order!
Amazing - By: Thomas, 22 Jan 2008 
If you like the series, then you will love the book. It is splitin very small pieces of information, which makes it ideal for commuting. I recommend it!
Barely interesting and doesn't transfer - By: Nigel Collier, 13 Jan 2008 
I love the TV show QI. I'm a fan of most of the guests, have seen severalin live gigs or else read a number of their various books, I've got the first series box set, the first DVD game & the Book of General Ignorance. Like I say, I'm a fan.
I'm also a fan of the TV comedy spin-off book - the Goodies books, the Young Ones, Morcambe & Wise, the New Statesman for example - were all grab bags of daft snippets, spoof documents, & other original material. This is genre of book which seemed to have gone out of favour for a while but has come back well lately with Al Murray's Pub Landlord's Book of British Common Sense & Borat's Touristic Guidings.
The QI Annual is along similar lines. It is stylishly presented - having a nice Beano annual look - & the contents are a more or less original miscellany of sideways-looking snippets, interesting facts & articles.
There are, to my mind, two vital ingredients to the concept & the appeal of QI: one is the spontaneous interplay between the guests & the other is the overturning of received wisdom. The currency of the show - its interesting facts - are usually all the more interesting because they are so little-known & bizarre or because they refute commonly held 'knowledge'. Both of these key ingredients are totally absent from the book.
The guest interplay is of course impossible to reflectin an annual but that needn't have undermined the QI Annual necessarily if the trivia was interesting & humorously communicated, but it's not. It's decidely dull & mundane. Jeremy Clarkson contributes a heavily padded out section, the basic gist of which is that people around the world eat stuff like dogs, guinea pigs & insects - hardly news to anyone. Clive Anderson delivers an essay on the English Elm...that's it...no angle, no punchline...just a dry couple of pages about an inappropriately named species of tree.
There are brief moments of edutainment (the spoof, Boys Own style cartoon adventures of Stephen Fry for example) but essentially this is a very shallow, sketchy sub-Schott book of unfunny, widely known trivia. If the book was not associated with the TV series, & the same content was compiled & attributed to some nobody researcher, then I doubt it would get published.
A very nice Annual for the series - By: D. D. Pitre, 08 Jan 2008 
A very nice read with plenty of toilet humour & interesting facts to impress your friends. To be honest some of he features of members from the show seem to lack any actual input from them at all as they cover random subjects like the Elm tree & What animals you wouldnt normally eat but still a very nice giggle at the end of the day & any fan of the show should own it
Really funny - By: Naomi, 18 Dec 2007 
I bought this for someone else for Xmas but I've managed to read just about all of it myself. Its really very funny & would appeal to almost anyone. It's an ideal gift, but one you might think about keeping for yourself.