There was a book on I read partly about common misconceptions. It was just a bunch of little facts, that’s all. Like, I think it said the George Washington cherry tree thing didn’t happen (not sure if that was one), and it talked about if lie detecter tests REALLY work. I don’t know the books name, anyone know…
It’s like a small bathroom type book… (for people that do that on the potty, I don’t).
There was a book I partly read , it was about common misconceptions. It was just a bunch of little facts, that’s all. Like, I think it said the George Washington cherry tree thing didn’t happen (not sure if that was one), and it talked about if lie detecter tests REALLY work. I don’t know the books name, anyone know… ??
It’s like a small bathroom type book… (for people that do that on the potty, I don’t).
–sorry, I hit send by mistake, I hadn’t look over it yet–
I used to have one such book (there are probably a number of 'em out there). The title was something about “I don’t care if Paul Revere rode or not.” It was the second in the series. I thought I still had it, but I can’t find it on my bookshelves. I did a search for “Paul Revere” on Amazon but after looking at the 85 selections, still couldn’t find it.
I think that’s called I Love Paul Revere Whether He Rode Or Not, or something like that.
I used to have one book like that (it may well be the Paul Revere book, can’t remember anymore) that’s mostly pretty good but goes off into a bizarre anti-vegetarianism rant at one point … ring a bell with anyone?
On the cover appears the following: "Everybody knows that George Washington was the first president of the United States, that Thomas Edison invented the electric light, and that St. Patrick was Irish. Everybody also knows that blood is red and that the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776.
And everybody is wrong."
It’s a really interesting little book, and perfect for the bathroom!
I love books like that; unfortunately the school library doesn’t stock many of them. They have the “Paul Revere” one (which I’ve read about five times) and also one called One Night Stands with American History. I’ll have to check out the others.
Also, for written-word debunking of popular hoaxes, you can’t beat Jan Harold Brunvand’s UL series.
Some people consider John Hanson to be the first president of the US, but he was only president of the “United States in Congress Assembled”, thus not the president of the nation we know today.
In a more serious vein, and probably not what the OP is looking for, is Martin Gardner’s Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science. It doesn’t cover the same kind of stuff as is mentioned above, but is well worth reading.
(I just had to plug it, since I’ve been a fan for years.)