From Publishers Weekly
Outside magazine editor Hampton Sides (Ghost Soldiers) has selected the cream of the crop from the magazine's q&a column "The Wild File" which debuted in 1994 to enthusiastic reader response in Why Moths Hate Thomas Edison: And Other Urgent Inquiries into the Odd Nature of Nature. The questions including "How long does it take a skunk to reload?" and "What would happen if I wore my Gore-Tex jacket inside out in a rainstorm?" may border on the bizarre, but the answers are all true. Sure to evoke great belly laughs, this book should be shared with friends.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
This collection of articles from
Outside magazine's questionandanswer column, the "Wild File," covers pretty much all the bases: birds, bugs, back roads, baffling nature puzzles, and much more. Written in a lively style, these short essays (about a page in length) tackle problems from the sublime to the ridiculous, calling at all stops in between. Do beavers get flattened by trees they cut down? Yes, sometimes. Why do men have nipples? They're holdovers from fetal times. What causes Arctic mirages? Light bouncing around in the atmosphere. Why do we get vicious muscle spasms just before going to sleep? Nobody really knows, but there's no need to panic. Everything you ever wanted to know-- within reason--about the quirks and foibles of nature is in here somewhere. Recommended for readers of light popular science books, this offers a painless, entertaining way to acquire some basic knowledge about the way the world works.
David PittCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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