From Publishers Weekly
Lee dismisses the usual suspects (anthrax, razor blades, schoolyard violence) and limns the risk in the utterly pedestrian tasks, objects and occurrences to which we give nary a thought (bagels, salons, office supplies). Organized like an encyclopedia, Lees field guide fingers culprits from the obvious (stairs) to the strained (a full moon), building her cases with statistics and studies both direct and tangential. This is no pedantic tome, though. Rather than breed paranoia, the book aims to adjust our perspective, diverting our paranoia for blue-moon events into a sensible vigilance toward our everyday lives. Ultimately, its a clarion call for common sense, written with playful irreverence and several eye rolls at our societys inflated hysteria at risks and our bumbling attempts to diffuse them. The advice is useful-and often cheeky. To minimize the threat of germ-ridden currency, for example, Lee suggests we send her our money immediately.
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Review
"...a fun-filled book, or, better yet, funny-filled...balances serious subjects with a smart and droll sense of humor." --
St. Louis Post Dispatch, July 27, 2004"Lee's dry, homorous tone makes her a chaming companion... a penchant for wordplay that is irresistible." --
San Francisco Chornicle, July 18, 2004"Packed with statistics and anecdotes to both amuse and horrify." --
Salt Lake Tribune, July 13, 2004A lighthearted expose of the simple problems often overlooked. --
The Bookseller, June 25, 2004Lee's book is entertaining and a reminder of how our own fears can hamstring us. --
The Baton Rouge Advocate, July 25, 2004Lee's cheeky approach is harmless fun... it's a book to pick through at your leisure. --
Memphis Flyer, Summer, 2004Lee's droll guide..is both entertaining and edifying. It is also, in this age of color-coded alerts, oddly comforting. --
Wall Street Journal, July 23, 2004a book that is both informative and funny - and a bit worrisome. --
Sacramento Bee, July 29, 2004the biggest danger is...you might fall down laughing while reading. --
Tallahassee Democrat, July 18, 2004the perfect book for anyone who does not already have enough to worry about --
New York Times, Crowd Pleasers, July 30, 2004
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