Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 031.02
EAN num: 9780060923273
ISBN number: 006092327X
Label: Collins
Manufacturer: Collins
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 288
Printing Date: August 03, 1992
Publishing house: Collins
Release Date: August 03, 1992
Sale Popularity Level: 908485
Studio: Collins
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
The fifth book in the Imponderables series that answers questions about everyday life for which encyclopedias, dictionaries, and almanacs just don't have the answers.
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
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It's a fun, informative book that holds the interest of pre-teens and adults alike. I would recommend the whole series to everyone.
Rated by buyers
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This book is good, it has the answers to questions that people have always wondered.
Rated by buyers
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Feldman keeps producing these books of imponderables;and they just keep
getting better all the time. His books just go on asking questions and producing answers about those unlimited number of things we've all wondered about,and even many that we have come to accept as "that's just the way it is". Feldman encourages his readers to send in their own imponderables to answer ;much in the same way that Allan Funt did with Practical Jokes on "Candid Camera " and Robert Ripley did with his Oddities with his "Believe It or Not". I have been a fan of this sort of thing and their "stuff" has intrigued the curious,entertained the joker in us all and amazed all who are surprised to see the rare or unbelievable.
This is the type of book that can be left hanging around, and anybody who picks it up will become engrossed in it in no time at all.Many of the imponderables you'll read about are not earth shattering,won't make much difference in your life,but nevertheless grab your interest and provide enjoyable pastime entertainment.Maybe the time spent waiting at the Dentist's,Doctor's ,Barbers or any other waiting room would be a little less painful if books like this were available rather than those awful magazines.
Who wouldn't be interested in questions like these?
"Why do straws in drinks sometimes sink and sometimes rise to the
surface?"
"Why is Rhode Island called an island when it obviuosly isn't an
island."
"How did they keep beer cold in the saloons of the Old West?"
"Why are 25-watt light bulbs more expensive than 60-,75-,and 100-watt
bulbs?"
"Why do hospital gowns tie in the back?"
"What causes the green-tinged potato chips we sometimes find? Are they
safe to eat?"
And how about thisimponderable that never seems to die?
"Why are so many restaurants,especially diners and coffee
shops,obsessed with mating Ketchup bottles at the end of the day?
Believe It or Not,it prevents Explosions! Thats right!;you'll find out why,right here in this book!
Rated by buyers
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As a kid, asking inumerable "stupid" questions was sure to get a weary "Go look it up" from a parent. Unfortunately, as a kid, I didn't have the innumerable resources at the fingertips of the Imponderables crew. As always, David Feldman and his team of information hunters have compiled questions from all over, some of which kept me going until I read the answer!
If you want to have an interesting afternoon while it's raining outside, get together some friends. Open up the book to a random page. Read out the question on that page, and have everyone come up with what they think the answer is. Then, read out the answer, and see who came close (or even spot on!). You'll be surprised (sometimes) to see some of the answers that your friends came up with be popular urban legends, which Feldman goes on to discredit.
Imponderables books are a riot for pleasure reading, or in large groups of people!
Rated by buyers
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Do Penguins Have Knees? is a great book with a great concept. It answers all of life's little imponderables that you always wanted to know the answer to but never knew who to ask. The questions range from, "Why do cats like to be scratched behind the ears?" to "How did they keep beer cold in the Old West?". In the back of the book are Frustables (Imponderables that have not been solved), a Frustable update (new answers to old Frustables), an index to this book, and an index to all of the other Imponderables book. Why someone would put all of that in a book beats me. You look at the big book only to find that 1/3 is spent on things other than Imponderables (such as the complete index to all of the books, which I think is a stupid idea). The only flaw in this book is that there might even be too much information. They give you the answer and they keep rambling on. Some of the answers took up 2-3 pages when they had answered the Imponderable on the very first page. Also, all of the names and places where they come from, for example: Bob Smith from the University of Learning Things in Yourtown, USA, seemed to clutter up the page and take away from the answer. I think this book had a great concept, but with a poor format.
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