Explores more than one hundred tall tales, suspicious stories, and urban myths, revealing how each has been disproven, with facts about myth origins, historical significance, and how they were investigated by scientific debunkers.
I hope by sharing my journey, it will encourage others to feel comfortable not being "the norm." In "Just When You Thought You Knew Me" I take you on an emotional rollercoaster that made me the man I am today.
infuriated she cautiously sauntered down the very gloomy corridor. “Dad! Dad! Where are you?” She called out. “You know it's all your fault, don't you? You know what you did! You have ruined me by taking my virginity!
she is spending another lonely night; she thought that you would be here to hold her tight. You had her to move here from her home state, and now she set here staring at an empty plate. When we use to talk on the phone, you told her ...
A latest entry in the kid-friendly reference series debunks such popular misconceptions as boys being better at math, an apple a day keeping the doctor away and the human race's evolution from chimps. Simultaneous.
they produced their children, Cain and Abel and so forth, with was corrupt because Adam's seed was implanted in Eve as he “knew his wife.” The sin of that seed was passed down and is washed in Jesus' blood as we turn our lives over to ...
from God . In Genesis 3 we read that after Adam and Eve had sinned , God came down to the Garden of Eden to meet with them . ... Where was he ? Hiding ! Of course , that was a useless act , since God knew exactly where he was .
This book was built from the ground up to systematically seek out, dismantle and destroy the many untruths that years of misguided education have left festering inside of you, and leave you a smarter person...whether you like it or not.
Chemist Fazale Rana, PhD, and astrophysicist Hugh Ross, PhD, discuss this at length in their book Who Was Adam? Rana and Ross state: Genetic studies of human population groups signify that humanity had a recent origin in a single ...
In The Accidental Universe, physicist and novelist Alan Lightman explores the emotional and philosophical questions raised by discoveries in science, focusing most intently on the human condition and the needs of humankind.
For fans of He Said/She Said and Anatomy of a Scandal, Penny Hancock’s I Thought I Knew You is about secrets and lies – and whose side you take when it really matters.