cover image The Norm Chronicles: Stories and Numbers About Danger and Death

The Norm Chronicles: Stories and Numbers About Danger and Death

Michael Blastland and David Spiegelhalter. Basic, $16.99 trade paper, (384p) ISBN 978-0-465-08570-5

Journalist Blastland (The Tiger That Isn't) and University of Cambridge risk expert Spiegelhalter examine the probabilities involved in surviving a day. Predictably this includes a plethora of statistics, but the stats are leavened by stories featuring Norm, the archetypical average guy, as well as cautious Prudence and the risk-taking Kevlin brothers. Drawing on media and government documents, the authors concoct a few measurements to help assess risk: the MicroMort, "a one-in-a-million chance of something horribly and fatally dramatic happening," and the MicroLife, one millionth of an adult life or approximately half an hour. Amidst the numbers and stories on topics as diverse as infant mortality, travel, extreme sports, and crime, the authors examine just how all of this affects non-theoretical humans. In the crime chapter they warn that "the plural of %E2%80%98anecdote' is not %E2%80%98data'... and the corollary of %E2%80%98vivid' or %E2%80%98lurid' is not %E2%80%98likely.'" From the beginning of the book, the authors acknowledge that "numbers may matter less to us than feelings," while they conclude by asserting that "probability [is] intuitively difficult and confusing." The whole is seasoned with a dash of humor to create a work that should satisfy anyone curious about just how and when this mortal coil might be shuffled off. (June)