You'll spend your WHOLE LIFE in your body. So it's only fair you know how it works, right?This book will teach you EVERYTHING you need to know about the machine that is YOU. From your astonishing brain to your hard-working heart. Get ready for the BIG questions, like:How many muscles do you move playing Fortnight? (A twitch of a thumb on the controller uses TEN muscles) Are chillis actually HOT? (Short answer: no. We've been fooled by a plant.) How far can we sneeze? (Your sneeze droplets can reach up to eight meters - which means you could sneeze over an entire class.)You'll also meet people like Chevalier Jackson, who collected things that people had swallowed by accident (for science, of course). And learn about why we poo (and why it smells). Packed with facts, history and humour, this beautifully illustrated book, from global bestselling science and history author Bill Bryson (ask your mum, he's the one with the beard), will help you understand the secrets to our bodies and brains. 'Offers children a series of fascinating scientific facts' Daily Telegraph
Sprache
Verlagsgruppe
Maße
Höhe: 296 mm
Breite: 227 mm
Dicke: 14 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-0-241-60624-7 (9780241606247)
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Bill Bryson was born in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1951. He is the author of eighteen books and holds the record of having the most bestsellers of any author on the Sunday Times bestseller list in the last fifty years. A Short History of Nearly Everything, first published in 2003, spent 106 weeks in the chart, won both the Aventis Prize and the Descartes Prize and is the biggest-selling non-fiction book of the twenty-first century.
Bill Bryson is a former Chancellor of Durham University and is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society. He lives in England.