But still a great gift! Get some holiday shopping done early! Order yours now!
"A rollicking ride of intellectual discovery and emotional growth... unlike his buzzer skills, his comic timing never fails"
-- The Wall Street Journal
"Pulls you in like a good sports story"
-- The New York Times Book Review
"Endearingly frank... jubilant... lighthearted and fast-paced"
-- New York Newsday
"A surprisingly touching memoir"
-- Entertainment Weekly
"Hugely funny"
-- Mental Floss
"Like Jeopardy! itself, it covers a lot of ground and in snappy and informative fashion"
-- Associated Press
"Down to earth and entertaining, even for non-Jeopardy! fans"
-- The New York Daily News
"A very funny writer... the book works like gangbusters."
-- Ken Jennings, 74-time Jeopardy! winner, holder of numerous other Jeopardy! records
"Effortlessly funny and informative... tender, human, and very wise... A must for anyone who loves Jeopardy!, or has ever seen it, or is breathing."
-- Joss Whedon, creator, Buffy the Vampire Slayer
"I haven't seen Jeopardy! since I was a kid, and yet I was charmed and amused by Bob Harris's fascinating and surprisingly suspenseful book. Through sheer force of personality, he takes this brainy TV show and makes it funny and easy to relate to."
-- Ira Glass, creator and host, This American Life
"Eccentric, energetic, and engaging"
-- Publishers Weekly
"The perfect gift for any Jeopardy! fan... I was thoroughly entertained"
-- USA Today, "Pop Candy"
"Surprisingly compelling... a funny and in-depth look at what it takes to win"
-- Long Island Press
"Wise, honest, and very funny... I wish I'd written it. Then again, I wish I'd won $127,000 and his-and-hers Camaros on Jeopardy!, too."
-- Jeff Greenstein, writer/producer, Desperate Housewives, Will & Grace, Friends
"Cleverly executed... solid entertainment"
-- Kirkus Reviews
"Answer: A hilarious, engaging and highly entertaining book. Question: What is Prisoner of Trebekistan? (All right... that was sort of a lame Jeopardy! joke. But what can I say? It's a great book.)"
-- Paul Feig, creator of Freaks and Geeks, author of Superstud and Kick Me
"A surprisingly intimate, entertaining book."
-- Orson Scott Card, author of Ender's Game
"Prisoner of Trebekistan is funny, enlightening -- and just might help you win a million bucks on Jeopardy!"
-- A. J. Jacobs, author of The Know-It-All
"If you don't buy this book -- this funny, learned, charming, and surprisingly moving book -- I will make it burst into flames in your hands."
-- Arthur Phillips, author of Prague and The Egyptologist
"A keeper for anyone who's even remotely a fan of Jeopardy!"
-- TVSquad.com
"If you enjoy... self-aware, geeky good humor, this could actually be your favorite book of the year."
"Hilarious... a true treat for all Jeopardy! fans."
-- Strand Bookstore
"Everything you'd hope for... surprisingly compelling... deftly woven together... this sweet, fascinating book is a great read."
-- Book-blog.com
"If super-intelligent space aliens invaded our planet and demanded to interview one member of our species to ascertain whether or not we human beings were logical, bright, kind, and entertaining enough to be allowed to continue, I would nominate, with all my powers of persuasion, Bob Harris."
-- Emo Philips, comedian
"A masterful job of describing the feel of Jeopardy! in the heat of battle... I knew that Bob was a great guy and a fantastic Jeopardy! player. Now I've found that he's also a wonderful writer. I think I'm starting to hate him."
-- Brad Rutter, top money-winner in Jeopardy! history
“Revelatory... wryly funny about some very serious subjects... Harris's sly wit and infectious curiosity make understanding world chaos fascinating... witty, horrific, and necessary.”
— Boston Globe
“Only Bob could make a user’s guide to our increasingly hostile world this absorbing, this breezy, and—ultimately—this hopeful.”
— Ken Jennings, author of Brainiac: Adventures in the Curious, Competitive, Compulsive World of Trivia Buffs
"Brave... irreverent... charges into the thick of the globe's myriad simmering wars... hilariously relaxed."
— New York Observer
“Fascinating, enlightening, and surprisingly: NOT TOTALLY DEPRESSING. A gimlet-eyed look at the world we endure that’s also suitable for enjoying with a gimlet.”
— John Hodgman, author of The Areas of My Expertise and correspondent for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
UPDATE, evening: fell off the Movers & Shakers apparently we shook a little too much or something but as of 11 pm the video is the top entry on the very front page of IFilm.com. Wow. (If it's not there by the time you read this, it's probably still featured under Viral Videos.)
I gotta start throwing stuff on the floor more often.
UPDATE, late night Wednesday: the video just hit the Google Top 100 Videos, at #85 and moving up. Holy crap. And just two notches above some guys making a geyser out of Mentos and Diet Coke.
Whoa. Thought I'd peek in at the site traffic before heading off to
bed, and holy crap there are suddenly hundreds of people showing up
in the middle of the night. Hmm. People are bopping over from the Google video, apparently. Probably including you. Neat!
So, um, hi. The site's not really dressed yet, at least the
PrisonerOfTrebekistan.com part you were aiming at. Didn't realize
you'd be here so early; I just posted that video a day or two ago. (The Internet
is one great set of tubes, is it not?) The Trebekistan pages will look a lot like this, with the menus all pointing at Trebekistan-related stuff:
What this is about is this: I've just finished an upcoming humor book about (believe it or not) the five times I've managed not to win on the quiz show Jeopardy!, and all the strange crap I learned and new friends and complete screw-ups that came along the way.
By the end, I eventually do not win over $3.1 million. Not a lot of people can say that, you know. Or would.
Along the way, I also get chased by baboons, say the wedding vows near a religious
statue that looks like an enormous penis, and find almost two dozen
interesting uses for rubber.
You might imagine it's kind of a fun book. I like to think so.
This blog is usually a snarky political humor thing, but of late the
book has sort of taken over for a while. So I'm building a whole
separate Trebekistan section, with more videos, sample chapters, stuff
that got cut, and even a recording of the index over some cool lounge
music. (You can measure the tone of the book from the fact that
"Jennings, Ken" comes exactly halfway between "Jesus Christ" and
"Jell-O Shooters." As do a lot of us, really.)
So far, Publishers Weekly and Kirkus just love the book, and even
better, a lot of people I truly admire (Joss Whedon, Ira Glass, Paul
Feig, Emo Philips, etc.) also seem to think the book is pretty good.
So that's exciting.
But that won't do any good if people don't find out about it, and (dare I dream?) even order up a copy
here and there. So if you laughed at the video enough to want see what
the Trebekistan-related site is like, well, I'm still building it, so enjoy what's here and pop back in now and again as the new section fleshes out. Maybe eventually, you'll even
decide to get the book for yourself or a family member who enjoys the show, but meanwhile you might find other stuff you like, too.
Incidentally, feel confident that the video is pretty much what the book is
like, only with less actual throwing of medicine. Really. You like one,
you'll like the other, I imagine.
So while you're here, poke around, and see if you like the sense of
things. And hey if you do, tell some people, would you, if you can
find a minute? Email them the first video, at least, and see if they laugh, too. I'd appreciate it.
Anyhow, I'm thrilled you liked the video enough to go looking for
more. I actually shot that while the apartment window was
half-obscured with various boxes and stuff, and I just sort of needed
to record the weirdness of it. Eventually, I shot a whole short
comedic film called Thumbs Of Steel, some clips from which I'll be uploading next.
So, um, hi. Thanks for coming by.
PS Anybody with ideas for more cool stuff on those pages, please share.
If there's time, I'll put up my favorite mnemonics,
chats with many of the game's best players (and you'd be
appalled at just how normal and funny these brilliant people actually
are), and whatever else seems like a good idea.
A birthday shout-out to the of the namesake of my new book, who has now done over 5000 episodes of a certain quiz show and still seems to enjoy it as much as ever.
The best present you could get the guy, I think, just might be five thousand more.
Said without the slightest irony: entirely possible.
Perhaps I will see him again, when they hold the Heads-In-Jars Tournament of 2052.
[E]ccentric, energetic and engaging. . . charming. . . zigs and zags back and forth in time and topic, but like the best of [comedy] routines, it is sharply timed, pulling out many swerves and surprises. . ."
I actually did a little dance when I read this. Not quite as skilled as Matt's, in the video referenced in the post below this. But still. Wow. Actual dancing.
The last few chapters of Trebekistan touch on my Jeopardy!-induced
increasing wanderlust of the last few years, so I suppose it was
inevitable that someone (in this case a kind fellow named
Darrell) would kindly point me to the website whereinthehellismatt.com.
I doubt we'd all travel to the same places for the same reasons for the
same lengths of time. But the video on the front page is a thing of
glee.
See if you aren't smiling broadly in about five minutes.
The latest news on the book: it just got its first major review, as of this morning. Kirkus had this to say (dated July 15th, but posted a little early, magazine-style I guess), among other kind words:
. . . This
cleverly executed volume displays the obligatory acumen and erudition,
as well as considerable wit and writing ability. . . [G]oes beyond
backstage information and tips on mnemonics to build a substantive
memoir of family and growth. Its about love and a burgeoning devotion
to history and science, to fun and facts and connections. For his next
report, we look forward to his departure from Trebekistan.
Of natural interest to Jeopardy! buffs, but solid entertainment as well for readers who dont tune in.
Well, whee!
I'm honestly still pretty ignorant of the book business, but Kirkus is
apparently sort of a big deal, in that bookstores tend to check out the
reviews while deciding how much of a given volume to stock. Or so I'm
told. I have no idea, really. But still, as of today, I feel even more eager to see how the book does.
If you'd like to pre-order
a copy of this caffeine-fueled memoir of high-stakes
televised stress, that would be neat.
But whether you're all excited
about the book or not, at least maybe you enjoyed watching a grown man
in his forties going "whee!" right in front of you just now.
Wow. I've been a fan of the show for many years. I'm truly thrilled. Starting to think the book won't be a total fiasco after all.
You'll soon see Ira's full blurb and a bunch of other stuff on a section of this site just for the book itself. I'll be working on that in the background for a whiile, so if the main blog slows down for a few days, I'm just putting up other stuff you'll see (and, I hope, really enjoy) later on.
The Trebekistan page will probably have the usual book stuff reviews, photos, etc. but I also want to include a bunch of fun stuff like strange-but-true facts I came across while studying, various appendices that didn't make it into the text, page-by-page asides about the book, and maybe even some short videos. Plus the index read over a cool tiki-jazz lounge music background. Which makes me smile for no reason I can imagine, but hey.
I'm trying to design it so that you'll have fun visiting, whether you decide to order the book or not.
Mentioned reviews just now. . . the first real review is scheduled for next week. Keep your fingers crossed.
In the last week, Prisoner of Trebekistan
has picked up two incredibly kind new blurbs from people I'm sure you've
heard of, and we're getting feedback from buyers from major retail
stores that is just amazingly positive. And I'm not even scratching
the surface of the good news.
I mention this for two reasons: (a) to brag like a howler monkey in
mating season, and (b) because, curiously, I find that to be honest it's starting to sorta scare
the crap out of me on some level.
How interesting.
It's clear from your emails that a lot of people who read this site
feel, I dunno, a certain vicarious empathy for the odd
little adventures I share here in between all the complaining. And I'm flattered and
pleased about that. So I'll share this, too:
I find myself genuinely weirded out at the realization that this thing
could actually be a real success. I'm not sure I've ever really had
one before. I've had lots of small successes; my radio career was like
that, for example. And I've been part of other people's big successes
many times; CSI leaps to
mind. But the vast majority of things I've ever done or tried have
been somewhere in the range between modest to abject albeit
interesting failures.
This has probably always been the case for a lot of people, and maybe
even most, at least if my reading of history is itself not a complete
failure, too. So failure is something I know I can do. I know how to
be disappointed. It sucks, but hey, I've got the drill down pat. I know
exactly how to buck up, refocus, and start again. I am fantastic at bucking up. It's the bulk of
what I've done, both personally and professionally, for most of my
adult life.
But what happens if the book is the success that a lot of people who really would know are starting to think it might be?
Holy crap. I have no idea what that looks like.
So that's exciting. But and here's the thing maybe you see right
along with me here it's also a rather large unknown. And on some
level, sometimes, for like a minute or two once or twice a day. . . it
kinda scares the flying shite out of me.
Weirdly, this actually something I write about in the book. One of the big hurdles to winning on Jeopardy!, for example,
is actually being able to imagine that you can. This sounds easy when
you're reading a blog, I imagine. But it's a different thing when
you're standing between two smart people and Alex is grilling you about
Antarctic Mythology with klieg lights shining on your forehead.
In a way, I guess what's coming is a lot like that. If anything happens at all. So I'll get my head around it soon enough. It's doable. But it really does take some preparation.
I'm trying to think of it as slow bungee jumping. You know it's pretty
safe, and you'll eventually get back home with really great stories,
and mostly it's gonna be a whole lot of giggling. But you also want
to wear safety equipment anyway.
So if I show up on some talk show couch in six months, and it looks
like I've got water wings under my sport jacket. . . well, now you know
why.
UPDATE: Kind reader Darin has suggested that the complete index would sound very cool if spoken aloud, with some lounge music in the background: absurd book index transformed into dada beat poetry.
I think this is just fabulous. In fact, I've already asked my publisher if we can do it that way on the actual audiobook. And if I get the OK, I'll post that as an mp3 here, too, so you guys can groove on the non-sequiturs and puzzle over how they relate while on the treadmill at the gym.
Which I don't think anyone will actually ever do, but it's such a delightfully goofy idea I have to do it.
If you'd like to know what an armored codpiece may have to do with playing Jeopardy!, then you really might have fun reading this thing when it comes out.
It also makes a great back-to-school gift. And a holiday gift. And the pages are vitamin-enriched.
The index to Prisoner of Trebekistan (now available for pre-order! Have I mentioned that? Really? Because it is!) is actually turning out to be a pretty decent little read on its own.