Who Killed Iago?

James Walton’s Who Killed Iago?: A Book of Fiendishly Challenging Literary Quizzes is, as the title implies, a book of trivia tests about literature, trending heavily towards classics and Brit lit. It’s based on a radio program in England called The Write Stuff which, in the tradition of British quiz shows, makes the typical American quiz show look like Chutes and Ladders*. I’ve read plenty of the classics and know a little bit about nearly all the classics I haven’t read, and I struggled to score around 50% for the book as a whole – which, of course, makes it fun.

*I’ve been to England once, when I was 17, and we caught a game show on British TV called Cross-Wits, on which contestants were given clues to a cryptic crossword puzzle and roughly 8 seconds to solve them, which they did with shocking frequency. This was my introduction to cryptic crosswords, now one of my favorite types of puzzles (albeit one for which I rarely have time). Even at the time, none of us could imagine a US television network airing such a program, given how much more difficult it was than any game show we’d ever seen in the U.S., and given the enduring popularity of the ultimate game show for morons, Wheel of Fortune, I feel confident that even the reach of the long tail won’t bring a cryptic crossword show to American airwaves any time soon.

The book comprises ten quizzes, each in five parts. One part revolves around a featured author, with subjects in this volume ranging from Jane Austen (I only scored 5/10, missing two easy questions on my two least favorite Austen novels) to Stephen King to Shakespeare to J.K. Rowling. One part comprises questions in the form of lists of four things – authors, titles, characters, what have you – leaving you to determine the connection between them. The other three parts of each quiz vary in theme, although literary errors pop up a few times, and he runs through some obvious ones like literary firsts and lasts and, my favorite, a set of questions on last lines of famous but long books that most people never finish (2/6, and I’ve never finished either book).

If you’re into literature across the ages, Who Killed Iago? should be up your alley, but it is understandably lighter on contemporary literature with only occasional forays into pop fiction (even Twilight appears once). It even included, in reverse, a Shakespeare question I’d seen before in an online trivia challenge a few months ago – “Which stage direction explains the disappearance of Antigonus from The Winter’s Tale?”

Oh, and if you’re wondering the answer to the question in the book’s title, highlight the line below:
Trick question: Iago is alive at the end of Othello, although he’s being dragged off stage to be tortured.

Comments

  1. Enter stage right.

    Keith, that text is bolded, not invisible.

    If Othello started two scenes earlier, it’d be called The Tragedy of Iago.

    Exit, pursued by a bear.

  2. Thanks. It was invisible in Chrome even with the bold, but I took the bold off just to be sure.

  3. I know and appreciate your disdain for WoF, but the ultimate show for half-wits has to be Deal or No Deal. Only a pulse is required to play that game.

  4. Not invisible in Firefox, FYI

    Good stuff, though, the wife has another birthday present

  5. Adding the missing number sign fixes it in Firefox for me, eg. from “ffffff” to “#ffffff”. Or you could just set it to “white” instead of using the hex format at all.

  6. This has nothing to do with this blog post, but I am going to highly recommend you read Max Frisch’s “I’m Not Stiller,” if you haven’t already. It is a literary gem.

  7. Dan,

    Deal or No deal is pretty annoying, but what I find most grating about Wheel of Fortune is the directive that everyone has to clap when the wheel is spinning. For some reason it just drives me nuts. It doesn’t help that Sajak is so insipid

  8. WOF & Deal are rather insulting, but I can’t believe how incredibly simple the questions are on that mob show (not even sure if it’s still on), the one hosted by Bob Saget. And yet, so many of them get them wrong.

  9. Speaking of game shows, this is an oldie but a goodie:

    http://www.theonion.com/content/node/29290

  10. Hey Keith,

    This is a little off topic, but regarding Ulysses, I read it with Harry Blamires Bloomsday book, which helped quite a bit in terms of both my enjoyment and my understanding of the book.

  11. P.S. If you’re ever feeling really daring, take the GRE Subject Test in English Literature just for fun. It’s a whopper of an exam.

  12. Klaw and Dish fans: if you’d like to laugh with or at — and I encourage either — one of your own, watch WOF on April 12 when I’m on the show. I taped it last week in California and thankfully did not embarrass myself beyond recovery. No matter the show’s intended audience, remember that the check cashes all the same (when I finally receive it in August.)

  13. Quiz shows in the UK are still as hard as ever. Even drunken bar trivia is nearly impossible but much more fun than US bar trivia. Example questions were filling in every country in a map of Africa or name the world’s 10 tallest buildings.

    For those who do newspaper puzzles, the Wall Street Journal added a new rotation of puzzles to the Saturday paper. Today’s was a cryptic puzzle.

  14. filling in every country in a map of Africa

    Please. Piece of cake.