About the Author:
Emily Krieger is a writer, an editor, and a fact-checker specializing in science and children's nonfiction. She has fact-checked the capital of Kyrgyzstan and other countries for the National Geographic Bee; amassed amazing tidbits about bugs, birds, and brains for 5,000 Awesome Facts (About Everything!); interviewed scientists about Bigfoot and George Washington's dentures for the book Myths Busted! (named the Fifth to Sixth Grade Book of the Year in the Children's Choice Book Awards); and pondered alien and ancient life while editing Science News for Students.
Tom Nick Cocotos has illustrated the Stupid Criminals feature in National Geographic Kids magazine for several years. His illustrations have also appeared in numerous publications such as Sports Illustrated, MAD magazine, The New York Times, and Newsweek, among many more. Cocotos, who is an adjunct professor at FIT in New York, has won numerous awards for his illustrations, including the Gold Addy Award and Folio: magazine’s Ozzie Awards (silver and bronze). He has also received accolades from organizations such as American Illustration, the Society of Illustrators of New York, and the Society of Illustrators of Los Angeles.
From Booklist:
Some myths take on a life of their own after they are repeated over and over and over. This book encourages readers to “unthink” more than 100 facts that they took as truth and dispels age-old truisms, such as George Washington’s wooden teeth, the five-second rule, and the full moon’s effects on human behavior. Krieger includes the origins of each untruth, giving readers insight into how mistaken beliefs come into being, become popular knowledge, and persist over time. The text is punctuated by relevant statistics from actual scientific studies and quips from experts. Cocotos’ artwork, in the form of photographic collages, enlivens each two-page spread of quick and portable knowledge, such as seven things dirtier than your toilet and six human-built objects you can see from space. The book’s thesis encourages healthy skepticism and discourages taking facts as truth without verification. This unlearning results in some serious learning. Grades 3-6. --Erin Anderson
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