
Do You Think You're Clever?: The Oxford and Cambridge Questions
by John Farndon
About this book
'What happens if I drop an ant'? 'What books are bad for you'? 'What percentage of the world's water is contained in a cow'? The Oxbridge undergraduate interviews are infamous for their unique ways of assessing candidates, and from these peculiar enquiries, professors can tell just how smart you really are. John Farndon has collected together 75 of the most intriguing questions taken from actual admission interviews and gives full answers to each, taking the reader through the fascinating histories, philosophies, sciences and arts that underlie each problem. This is a book for everyone who likes to think they're clever, or who thinks they'd like to be clever. And cleverness is not just knowing stuff, it's how laterally, deeply and interestingly you can bend your brain. Guesstimating the population of Croydon, for example, opens a chain of thought from which you can predict the strength of a nuclear bomb ...and that's just the start of it.
Where to buy
No purchase options available at this time.
More by John Farndon

Do Not Open
John Farndon

The Economics Book: Big Ideas Simply Explained
Marcus Weeks, John Farndon, Christopher Wallace, Frank Kennedy, George Abbot, Niall Kishtainy, James Meadway

The Great Scientists: From Euclid to Stephen Hawking
John Farndon

The Science Book: Big Ideas Simply Explained
Dan Green, John Farndon, Adam Hart-Davis, Rob Scott Colson