In the world of statistics textbooks, Andy Field is a true superstar.
This may sound like faint praise, but the unexcitingly titled Discovering Statistics Using SPSS â and variant versions using different software systems â have proved spectacular best-sellers, generating musical tributes on YouTube and lots of almost creepily enthusiastic online endorsements.
Now professor of child psychopathology at the University of Sussex, Field describes the first edition of the book, published in 2000, as âan 800-page brain fart of me doing what I thought would workâ and, notably, trying to be âa bit more irreverentâ and to âuse more student-friendly examples than I had seen in other textbooksâ. With each revision he was determined to âbe more wacky and up the anteâ. The third edition had a running thread about his life story (and his cat Fuzzy). It also included his ultimate âstudent-friendly exampleâ.
âI saw something in a surgery journal about someone who turned up in A&E complaining about abdominal pains,â he recalls. âThey did an X-ray and found an eel in his anus, which he claimed was a cure for constipation.â Although this was a pretty implausible theory, it was nonetheless âan empirical questionâ, so Field decided to explain logistic regression by inventing a medic who collected data comparing the insertion of eels with treatment-as-usual for constipation.
Âé¶č
Discovering Statistics is designed to take students âin a vast number of disciplines where statistics is a core module but not the core subjectâ through all the material they require for a full three-year course. Yet it also left Field with âan itch to scratchâ. When working on the third edition, he had âthought it would be cool to embed all the content in a storyâ but had eventually decided against it. But he has finally been able to achieve his dream with the publication of An Adventure in Statistics: The Reality Enigma.
On one level, this functions as a standard statistics textbook â at a rather more foundational level than the earlier text â and incorporates âcheck your brainâ questions, revision summaries and tests. But it is also, explains Field, âa bit of a thriller about a guy whose girlfriend disappears and heâs trying to find her and find out what happened to her. Zach is a musician who doesnât understand science and the world Alice inhabitsâŠHe has to have a very powerful reason to tolerate lots of people teaching him statistics. Heâs invested in finding out whatâs happened to the love of his life.â
Âé¶č
There are strong sci-fi elements, since the events unfold in the future after the invention of something called a âreality prism â a transparent pyramid worn on the head â [which] splits reality into the part that is objectively true and the part that is subjective experienceâ. A final element in this utterly unique book is the inclusion of panels that could have come straight from a graphic novel.
A big sci-fi fan, Field admits that he is also âa sucker for a good bit of romance. If you give me a book like [Audrey Niffeneggerâs] The Time Travelerâs Wife, an interesting story which happens to have love at the heart of it, I will sit crying on the train reading itâ.
But although he has drawn on genres he likes, he has been endlessly ingenious in finding ways to bring statistical information into the core of his work. Zach desperately cross-examines Alice on the last evening they spend together, tries to find out what has happened to her from a counsellor she has been seeing, seeks advice from a cat called Milton (who may or may not have his interests at heart) and even acquires the maths he needs to overcome a number of deadly challenges. Â
For the future, Field âwould definitely like to write some fiction which doesnât have stats popping up every five minutesâ. Although he has âno evidence that teaching stats through a narrative is a useful thing to doâ, he very much hopes that readers will âget hooked on the storyâ and so âslowly get sucked in".
Âé¶č
"I have structured the book so there are intriguing things you want to know the answer to. By carrying on reading, you are shoehorned into learning more stats.â
Andy Fieldâs An Adventure in Statistics: The Reality Enigma is shortly to be released by Sage Publishing.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: A thriller that turns on vital statistics
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?





