Always Follow the Elephants: More Surprising Facts and Misleading Myths about Our Health and the World We Live in
Always Follow the Elephants: More Surprising Facts and Misleading Myths about Our Health and the World We Live in
From The New York Times's intrepid Really? reporter and author of the bestselling Never Shower in a Thunderstorm, more mind-opening health facts (and fictions)
In this follow-up to the bestselling Never Shower in a Thunderstorm, New York Times columnist Anahad O'Connor uncovers the truth behind a hundred more old wives' tales and conventional-wisdom cures. O'Connor investigates nagging questions of domestic safety, such as whether you can get radiation poisoning from standing too close to a microwave. (You'll actually be exposed to more watts from your cell phone.) He unearths astounding first-aid MacGyverisms, such as the attempts by Vietnam War battlefield medics and professional sports stars to seal wounds with super glue. (The bottom line: it works, but can irritate skin.) And he looks into the claim that a pregnant mother with heartburn should expect a hairy newborn (and is as baffled as the scientists who tallied up the clearly evident infant hairdos). For anyone curious about whether to starve a fever or a cold, or whether stifling a sneeze will damage the body, O'Connor delivers yet another winning and irresistible collection of tips about our health.Author: Anahad O'Connor
Publisher: Times Books
Published: 09/29/2009
Pages: 288
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.56lbs
Size: 8.16h x 5.62w x 0.75d
ISBN: 9780805090000
Review Citation(s):
Booklist 10/01/2009 pg. 12
About the Author
Anahad O'Connor is a reporter for The New York Times covering breaking national news and contributes the weekly column Really?--named for his favorite word in journalism--to the paper's Science Times section. The author of Never Shower in a Thunderstorm (ISBN: 978-0-8050-8312-5), he lives in New York City.
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