Mysteries of the human body Weird and wonderful anatomy explained

Azmain Chowdhury

Book - 2025

"You know your heart is always beating, your intestines digest your food, and even that your brain is still awake when you're asleep--that's no mystery. But why do we get 'brain freeze' if we eat ice cream too quickly? And why on earth do we get butterflies in our stomach when we're nervous? And is it true we can squirt milk from our eyes? This book focuses on the bizarre things all of our bodies do--including things we don't understand (looking at you, appendix)"--

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  • Welcome to your body!
  • Can you catch a cold in the cold?
  • Are there butterflies in my tummy?
  • Why do I get wrinkly when I'm wet?
  • Are yawns contagious?
  • Why do we have baby teeth?
  • Is it green… or is it red?
  • Can you hiccup forever?
  • Could you never sleep again?
  • Can double-jointed people bend too far?
  • Where do different eye colors come from?
  • Can people squirt liquid in their mouth out of their eye?
  • Can your heart actually break?
  • What is a placebo?
  • Are all of our body parts essential?
  • Have I seen you before?
  • Why can't I have curly hair?
  • Why does cilantro taste like soap?
  • Can you teach yourself to be ambidextrous?
  • Does everybody feel pain?
  • Do brains really freeze?
  • Glossary & Index
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A doctor digs into 20 common body myths and misconceptions, from why wet skin wrinkles up to whether brains can truly freeze and hearts can break. Chowdhury offers plenty of unusual revelations: There actually is a "broken heart" syndrome, called "takotsubo cardiomyopathy," and it's not water but nerve impulses to local blood vessels that cause fingertips to wrinkle. The author takes each of his topics as an opportunity to describe a broader anatomical feature or process in simple but not reductive language. Readers get a refresher on the heart's chambers as well as insight into the cardiac effects of physical or emotional stress, and a look at eye colors leads to notes on genes and mutation (because until 6,000--10,000 years ago, all human eyes were brown). Anyone who has marveled at the placebo effect or the mystery of déjà vu or contemplated why humans, dogs, chimps, and even unborn babies yawn will come away both enlightened and more aware than ever that our bodies are rich in unexplained wonders. Nelson's free-form gatherings of body parts, fanciful spot images, and diversely hued human figures add notes of whimsy and loud color. Absorbing insights into what makes us tick.(Informational picture book. 7-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.