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What If? by Randall Munroe Review: Science Meets Absurdity With Rigorous Delight
What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions is a New York Times bestseller from Randall Munroe — xkcd creator and former NASA roboticist — that applies genuine scientific methodology to deliberately ridiculous questions, making it one of popular science's most inventive and entertaining reference-style works. This review covers the book's content and published reception; it does not represent hands-on use or testing of the science within.
LuvemBooks Verdict
Best for
Curious general readers and science enthusiasts — especially fans of xkcd or anyone who wants to see what genuine scientific thinking looks like when applied without restraint to gloriously absurd premises.
Worth it if
You want popular science that is neither dumbed down nor self-serious, and you're happy dipping in and out of self-contained chapters rather than following a linear argument.
Skip if
You're seeking a conventional popular-science book with a cumulative narrative or progressive depth — the deliberately loose, episodic structure and xkcd-native comedic register won't satisfy that need.
What readers & critics say
The Scholarly Kitchen praised the book as "one of my favorite journeys… from the ridiculous to the sublime," noting that the answers illuminate genuine scientific phenomena as a byproduct of chasing absurd premises to their logical ends. Wired called it "a great book" overall, while PPLD described it as answering completely strange questions "with complete scientific accuracy, and a bit of humor."
Sources: The Scholarly Kitchen, Wired, PPLDLook inside the book
Preview the actual pages, via Google BooksIn This Review
- What Works & What Doesn't
- What the Book Actually Is and Does
- The Significance of Munroe's Background
- Strengths: Clarity, Humor, and Intellectual Modeling
- Limitations and Who May Be Frustrated
- Who This Book Is Genuinely For
What Works & What Doesn't
What Works
- Applies authentic scientific methodology — computer simulations, differential equations, expert consultation — to each question, grounding the humor in real rigor
- Covers a wide range of phenomena (relativistic physics, thermodynamics, orbital mechanics, and more) through the natural demands of answering absurd hypotheticals
- The episodic Q&A structure makes it highly accessible for non-linear reading and returning to favorite chapters
- Grew directly from xkcd's reader community, giving the questions a genuine, crowd-sourced spontaneity rather than a manufactured premise
- Includes bibliographical references, reflecting a commitment to sourcing that distinguishes it from lighter popular-science fare
What Doesn't
- The self-contained, episodic format offers no cumulative argument or structured progression for readers seeking systematic learning
- The xkcd-native comedic register — spare, internet-inflected, physics-adjacent — may not land equally for all general readers
- The recurring 'Weird (and Worrying) Questions' interludes deliberately forgo full scientific treatment, which can feel like a tonal detour for readers drawn to the deeper chapters

What the Book Actually Is and Does
The Significance of Munroe's Background
Strengths: Clarity, Humor, and Intellectual Modeling
Limitations and Who May Be Frustrated
Who This Book Is Genuinely For
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & Further Reading
The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.
- Cited in this review
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- Further reading
- 3
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