The Guardian (USA)

Is Superman Circumcise­d? favourite to win Oddest book title of the year

- Alison Flood

An examinatio­n of the Jewish origins of the Man of Steel, Is Superman Circumcise­d?, is vying with an up-todate look at camel milk and related camel goods, Handbook of Research on Health and Environmen­tal Benefits of Camel Products, for the dubious honour of the oddest book title of the year.

The prize was dreamed up in 1978 by the co-founders of The Diagram Group, to pass the time at the annual Frankfurt book fair. The inaugural award went to Proceeding­s of the Second Internatio­nal Workshop on Nude Mice, with winners in subsequent years ranging from Greek Rural Postmen and Their Cancellati­on Numbers, to How to Avoid Huge Ships.

Six books are in the running for the 43rd prize, nominated by members of the book trade, with Curves for the Mathematic­ally Curious up against Hats: A Very Unnatural History, The Life Cycle of Russian Things: From Fish

Guts to Fabergé, and Miss, I Don’t Give a Shit: Engaging with Challengin­g Behaviour in Schools.

Tom Tivnan, the Bookseller’s managing editor and the prize’s co-ordinator, praised the academics who have written all six of the books in the running for the award.

“The erotic undertones of Curves for the Mathematic­ally Curious is a good example – emphasised by Princeton University Press’s marketing copy which is quite frankly the horniest maths book blurb ever written: ‘A rigorous and enriching experience for anyone interested in curves … Every curve has a story worth telling.’ Goodness, is it hot in here, or is it just your Euler spiral and parametric equations?” said Tivnan.

“However, I was taken aback when Miss, I Don’t Give a Shit was submitted. My first thought was ‘I know children are different these days, but the Roger Hargreaves books have really taken a darker turn.’ Turns out, it’s not the latest Little Miss book, but a teacher’s guide to engaging with difficult students.”

But Tivnan predicted that Is Superman Circumcise­d? was likely to be a frontrunne­r for this year’s prize. “Diagram voters have long had a sometimes lamentable predilecti­on for titles that refer, even obliquely, to naughty bits. I’m thinking of Charles L Dobbins’s 2019-winning self-published trapping guide, The Dirt Hole and Its Variations, and the Institute of Mechanical Engineers’ Designing High Performanc­e Stiffened Structures which rose to the occasion to win the prize in 2000,” he said.The winner will be chosen by a public vote on the Book

 ?? ?? Naughty … this year’s contenders for the Diagram prize Composite: The Diagram prize
Naughty … this year’s contenders for the Diagram prize Composite: The Diagram prize

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States