Review: The Guinea Pig Diaries, by A.J. Jacobs

by Belle Wong on September 10, 2009

The Guinea Pig Diaries

Excerpt from the book jacket:

In his role as human guinea pig, Jacobs fearlessly takes on a series of life-altering challenges that provides readers with equal parts insight and humor. (And which drives A.J.’s patient wife, Julie, to the brink of insanity.)

I loved The Guinea Pig Diaries, by A.J. Jacobs. It came into my life just yesterday – I spotted it while out shopping and couldn’t resist the title, especially since Jacobs’ The Know-It-All had been highly recommended by Carrie from Books and Movies (The Know-It-All is currently sitting in my to-be-read pile).

It’s rare that I decide to read a book on the day that I receive it; I’m such a moody reader, and my mood has to coincide with a book’s genre, plot and theme first. But late in the afternoon yesterday, I was feeling a little down, so I decided to read an essay or two from The Guinea Pig Diaries because I just didn’t feel in the mood for a novel.

What a ride those first few essays were! I couldn’t stop at just two essays; I ended up reading the entire book last night.. Did I say “feeling a little bit down”? It’s hard to stay down when you’re laughing out loud, and laugh out loud is exactly what I did while reading this book.

The charm of the book doesn’t stop there, though. Jacobs is very funny, but his words are more than pure comedy. He takes his experiments seriously, and writes about the insights he’s gained during the course of each experiment. Each essay ends with a Coda that talks about how the experience of the experiment itself has altered his life, for good or for bad.

And the experiments run such a wide range. There’s his outsourcing experiment, where he decides to spend a month outsourcing both his work and his personal life to a team out in Bangalore, India:

I had [Asha] call AT&T to ask about my cell phone plan. I’m just guessing, but I bet her call was routed from Bangalore to New Jersey and then back to an AT&T employee in Bangalore, which makes me happy for some reason.

Then there’s the month he decides to give Radical Honesty a try. Radical Honesty isn’t just about not lying; it also requires you to remove that filter from your brain and your mouth, so that you’re always – and that’s always – saying what you think:

One other thing is also becoming apparent: There’s a fine line between Radical Honesty and creepiness. Or actually no line at all. It’s simple logic: Men think about sex every three minutes, as the scientists at Redbook remind us. If you speak whatever’s on your mind, you’ll be talking about sex every three minutes.

There are other experiments, too. There’s the month he decides to live his life according to George Washington’s 110 Rules of Civility and Decent Behaviour in Company and Conversation; the month he gets a taste of what being a beautiful woman is like when he persuades his sons’ nanny to let him handle her online profile at a dating site; there’s the time actress Mary-Louise Parker agrees to write an essay for Esquire about what it feels like to pose naked (with an accompanying photo), provided Jacobs agrees to appear in the magazine naked too; and there’s the time he appeared at the Academy Awards disguised as a celebrity, for his “240 Minutes of Fame”.

My favourite piece, though? It’s a toss-up between “The Rationality Project” and “Whipped”. During Project Rationality, Jacobs decides to eliminate all cognitive biases from his brain for a month:

As one scientist puts it, we’ve got Stone Age minds living in silicon-age bodies. Our brains were formed to deal with Paleolithic problems. When my brain gets scared, it causes a spike in adrenaline, which might have been helpful when facing a mastodon but is highly counterproductive when facing a snippy salesman at the Verizon outlet.

What I liked most about “The Rationality Project” was the aftereffect Jacobs experienced as a result. There’s something that’s so appealing to me about letting go of the assumptions we make all too readily about various situations in life, and Jacobs highlights some real long-term benefits of his experiment.

In “Whipped”, Jacobs decides to go along with readers’ suggestions that he make it up to his wife for all that she has  had to put up with during the course of his quirky quests and experiments:

I need to pay Julie back in a more appropriate fashion. I need to spend a month doing everything my wife says. She will be boss. I will be her devoted servant. It will be a month, they say, of foot massages and talking about feelings and scrubbing dishes and watching Kate Hudson movies (well, if Julie actually liked Kate Hudson movies, which she doesn’t).

How could I not enjoy reading about that? Jacobs was figuring that his wife would get bored of being in charge. Do I even need to say it? That didn’t happen.

I loved The Guinea Pig Diaries. It was funny, yes, but each essay also made me think. And to me, that’s essay writing at its best.

I’m very eager now to read Jacobs’ The Know It All – or at least, I would be, if it weren’t for the fact that he misspelled Wayne Gretzky’s name in that book (and that is an inside joke you’ll only get once you’ve read The Guinea Pig Diaries).

Where to buy The Guinea Pig Diaries:

U.S. (Amazon.com) | Indiebound | Canada (Chapters) | UK (Amazon.co.uk)

Review copy details: published by Simon and Schuster, 2009, Hardcover, 236 pages

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{ 21 comments… read them below or add one }

1 rhapsodyinbooks September 10, 2009 at 8:01 pm

Sounds very cute! And of course the part about devoting a month to his wife’s every whim sounds fantastic! :–)
.-= rhapsodyinbooks´s last blog ..Weekly Geeks 2009-34: Writing Reviews =-.

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2 Belle September 10, 2009 at 10:49 pm

I know, Jill – it’s like a fantasy come true, isn’t it? The essay actually is about his thoughts on being a househusband and sharing more equally in the responsibilities – I must confess, my husband is like that (he’d say we split the housework and childcare 60 (him)/40 (me)!) and it was fun reading another man’s take on the experience.

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3 Carrie K. September 10, 2009 at 9:18 pm

I only just found out that he had another book out – I loved his first two – and this is definitely going on my wish list. Great review!
.-= Carrie K.´s last blog ..Literary Road Trip: Author Terry Davis =-.

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4 Belle September 10, 2009 at 10:50 pm

I don’t have A Year of Living Biblically yet, Carrie. I’d wanted to try out The Know It All first, but now that I’ve read this latest one, I’m definitely going to grab A Year of Living Biblically!.

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5 Margot September 10, 2009 at 9:39 pm

I see what you mean about funny. I was laughing out loud at the quotes. I’m so glad it perked you up.
.-= Margot´s last blog ..An Old Favorite: September by Rosamunde Pilcher =-.

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6 Belle September 10, 2009 at 10:51 pm

It was so hard picking the quotes, Margot – there were so many that made me laugh! And yes, it definitely did perk me up, a lot. There was definitely a reason why I saw that book at the store and decided to grab it (I don’t often buy an “unknown” book in hardcover but I didn’t even hesitate when I saw it).

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7 Kathy September 10, 2009 at 10:18 pm

I would have guessed this was a YA book, but after reading those quotes, I think it’s not.
.-= Kathy´s last blog ..Current giveaways =-.

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8 Belle September 10, 2009 at 10:52 pm

Kathy, it’s definitely not a YA book – although, I’ve given it to my son to read. I think he’ll get a kick out of it.

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9 Jen - Devourer of Books September 11, 2009 at 9:10 am

I looooooved “The Know it All” and enjoyed “Year of Living Biblically” so I’m definitely excited to read this one. I do feel a bit bad for his wife with all of these crazy experiments.
.-= Jen – Devourer of Books´s last blog ..Mistress of the Vatican – Book Review =-.

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10 Belle September 13, 2009 at 1:52 am

Jen, I really really have to read both Jacobs’ other two books. After this taste of his writing, I’m so looking forward to it!

And it would drive me totally crazy, all that experimenting. She totally deserved that month of bliss.

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11 Ruth September 12, 2009 at 1:26 am

Wow, I’m kind of surprised to read such a positive review about a book of essays! Sounds interesting and worth checking out, though. :)
.-= Ruth´s last blog ..Cadbury go Fair Trade =-.

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12 Belle September 13, 2009 at 1:53 am

I have this thing about essays, though, particularly humorous ones. I really like them. Bill Bryson is one of my faves – and now it looks like AJ Jacobs is, too!

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13 Malcolm R. Campbell September 12, 2009 at 10:22 am

Uh oh, I feel tempted to buy yet another book. Great review.

Malcolm

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14 Belle September 13, 2009 at 1:54 am

Thank you. I suspect you’ll like this one, Malcolm.

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15 Rebecca @ The Book Lady's Blog September 12, 2009 at 9:03 pm

I skimmed this because I was looking at it at work yesterday, trying to decide whether I wanted to read it. I’ve enjoyed his other books and was waiting for someone to review it. So glad you did and that you enjoyed it! A.J. Jacobs is definitely great for impulsive, read-it-all-in-one-sitting pleasure.
.-= Rebecca @ The Book Lady’s Blog´s last blog ..My first time [with Judy Blume's FOREVER] =-.

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16 Belle September 13, 2009 at 1:56 am

Rebecca, I was SO surprised that I read this one in one sitting! I was thinking I’d just dip into it for a bit, the way I generally do with nonfiction. And it was 2:30 am and I was finishing up the last essay. Definitely a pleasure!

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17 Nymeth September 13, 2009 at 7:15 am

This sounds so awesome! I’m always looking for non-fic recommendations, so thank you! Adding it to my wishlist.
.-= Nymeth´s last blog ..BBAW – Giveaway the First =-.

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18 Alyce September 13, 2009 at 3:10 pm

I never would have picked this one up on my own, but it sounds just like something I would like to read. I’m adding it to my wish list.
.-= Alyce´s last blog ..BBAW Giveaway #3 – The Puzzle King =-.

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19 Stephanie September 14, 2009 at 2:51 pm

I’ve read both of Jacobs’ other books and enjoyed them both, so I’ll have to get ahold of this one. I didn’t even know he had another book out!
.-= Stephanie´s last blog ..BBAW: Day One! =-.

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20 Lahni September 16, 2009 at 5:12 pm

Is this a new one? I’ve read The Know it All, and Living Biblically and really enjoyed them. I can’t wait to check this one out!
.-= Lahni´s last blog ..Book Review – Three Cups of Tea =-.

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21 Joanne September 29, 2009 at 6:44 am

This sounds fantastic! The thing I like most about Jacobs’ books that I’ve read is that they are informative and fun.
.-= Joanne´s last blog ..Six Sentence Saturday v.2 =-.

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