Kamis, 06 Februari 2014

[I106.Ebook] Download Alien Hand Syndrome, by Alan Bellows

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Alien Hand Syndrome, by Alan Bellows

Alien Hand Syndrome, by Alan Bellows



Alien Hand Syndrome, by Alan Bellows

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Alien Hand Syndrome, by Alan Bellows

Welcome to the five stages of reading Alien Hand Syndrome: Astonishment: This is amazing! Insecurity: I’m a smart person― how could I never have heard of this before? Panic: Please, don't let it end. Gratitude: Great!―and look, there are over 90 more essays where that one came from. And Zeal: You won't believe what I just read.

Collected and curated by Alan Bellows and his team at DamnInteresting.com, with over 400,000 unique visitors a month, this is the stuff nightmares are made of, and no one will be able to stop reading: Giant Carnivorous Centipedes; Mike, the Headless Chicken; The Exploding Lakes of Cameroon; The Swirling Vortex of Doom; Secret Agent Cyborg Cats; Fiery Balls of Naga; The Deepest Hole; The Terrifying Toothpick Fish; and, of course, Alien Hand Syndrome―a disorder wherein a person's hand develops a "will of its own," unbuttoning shirts, grabbing at the steering wheel, tossing away cigarettes, and in some cases actually attacking its host.

Most entries are full-blown narratives, complete with illustrations―for example, pointing out step-by-step how "The Halifax Disaster" unfolded. Other entries examine short-take anomalies―such as unusual drug side effects, including the antidepressant Clomipramine (spontaneous orgasm upon yawning), the hormone Oxytocin (increases one's generosity), the medicine for Parkinson's disease, Ropinirole (compulsive gambling), and Viagra (priapus syndrome, with a remote chance of gangrene curable only through penectomy―say no more).


  • Sales Rank: #473152 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-07-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.25" h x .69" w x 7.38" l, 1.14 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

From the Back Cover
A compulsively readable collection, Alien Hand Syndrome brings together over 90 fantastic-but-true stories―absolutely mind-bending gems plucked from the annals of history. Selected and narrated by Alan Bellows―who can take the chaos of an event like the Lake Peigneur Disaster and retell it with harrowing step-by-step suspense―each entry opens a window onto a world where something’s gone terribly, yet fascinatingly, wrong. You can't get enough.

About the Author
Alan Bellows, aka "The Professor," is the writer, designer, managing editor, and marketing mastermind behind DamnInteresting.com. A software designer, he developed his fascination for the odd and unexpected while doing programming for the library industry. He lives with his wife in Orem, Utah.

Excerpt. � Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Naga Fireballs
A fire-breathing river perplexes citizens and scientists

Every year in October near the end of Buddhist Lent, hundreds of people gather after dusk at Wat Paa Luang, a 450-year-old temple on the edge of the Mekong River in the Nong Khai province of Thailand. Though they cannot predict the exact times or locations, a little patience usually earns spectators a view of a small, pinkish sphere rising out of the surface of the river. The glowing ball lingers above the river for up to a few moments, then ascends rapidly and silently into the atmosphere until it is lost to the eye. Most such nights there are dozens to hundreds of the fist-sized wisps flying skyward. Unlike so many other outlandish claims that photography cannot adequately capture, the Naga Fireballs have been witnessed by thousands of people for hundreds of years.

To believers, these fireballs are the breath of “Naga,” a large, magical serpent who patrols the river. Many of the locals tell tales of spotting a silvery flash of scale or speak of an elusive photograph proving the existence of the elusive Naga. Others seek a more rational explanation.

To many, the fireballs appear artificial in their origin, and thus they consider the entire event a hoax. These naysayers, however, offer only anecdotal evidence to support their theory. Supposed hoaxes include tales of the Wat Paa Luang monks secretly planting or lighting fireworks in order to draw crowds, or that the fireballs are simply a tradition of the region’s youth celebrating in what amounts to a centuries-long ongoing prank. In any case, 100 years of verified sightings makes the case for a conspiracy a weak one―any such ongoing effort would require preparation, equipment, and a superhuman commitment not to brag to the pretty girls who show up to view the spectacle.

Others believe that a natural phenomenon is at play, but look to other causes than the breath of an enormous, camera-shy serpent. While the phenomenon is most readily observed at night, there are some credible reports of daytime fireballs as well, though they are difficult to see in the light. Their appearance is also not isolated to October―they have been spied throughout the year but are especially common in May.

One theory proposed by Manas Kanoksin, a doctor from Nong Khai, postulates that fermenting sediment on the river’s bottom causes pockets of methane gas to form. He further suggests that the Earth’s position in relation to the sun at those times of year causes the bubbles to rise and then spontaneously ignite at the in the presence of ionized oxygen. Other researchers point out that the rocky river bottom doesn’t have much sediment and that the river’s turbulent waters would break up any such methane bubbles before they could reach the surface. Nevertheless, a 2002 study using robotic submarines indicated that the methane theory was at least viable, although it did not address the question of how the bubbles could reach the surface intact.

In 2003, the Thailand Science Ministry released a report that claimed to have solved the mystery of the fireballs. A thermo-scanner was set up near the riverbank, and several teams of specialists stood watch where the fireballs are commonly seen. Reportedly, the scanning equipment detected the movement of phosphine gas coming off the water before anyone could see a fireball form. The presence of phosphine seems a reasonable conclusion―as methane released by decay of plant and animal remains could combine with phosphorus from chemical fertilizer used on nearby farms to form the gas. This does not, however, explain the source of energy or microbes required to make the balls of gas appear fiery.

Despite the locals’ preference for romantic silver-serpent stories, the harsh light of science is slowly disassembling the superstitions. Regardless of its natural or supernatural origins, however, this curious and beautiful phenomenon seems to be unique in our world, which lends it a certain awe that no number of sticks-in-the-mud may dislodge


Most helpful customer reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
Smart fun
By H. Hogan
I love Mental_Floss magazine, and as a result a friend recommended me to the Damn Interesting page about a year and a half ago. I check it everyday! The website is great for picking up interesting conversation starters and little fun facts. I always felt like I learned something after reading the articles, and it's great they finally have a book out! This book is perfect intellectual beach reading (or bathroom reading!) The essays are about really interesting and obscure subjects, like ancient birth control methods and ne'er-do-wells who are sole survivors of volcanic eruptions. A lot of learning and a lot of fun!

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Highly addictive
By Bryan J. Lowder
(In the interest of full disclosure, I am a contributing editor).
The book turned out better than I even anticipated. (The cover has improved, for one thing.) I hadn't been keeping up with the site, and now I see what I've been missing-- and there's other stuff exclusive to the book, if you are a faithful follower. I seriously love it. This is Ripley's for the 21st century. Fascinating, funny, disturbing, awe-inspiring, all in rapid succession. And all in bite-sized chunks. (Dare I say it? It's good bathroom reading...) I've found the book itself is a conversation piece. People laugh at the title and then ask what it's about. And if you've read it, well, you'll have plenty of facts to mesmerize that girl at the cocktail party. And you'll be a better person for it. Moreover, the book is cheap! But why listen to me? See what Scott Adams said about it on the cover. Alan's writing (and everybody else's!) absolutely scintillates. So go find out what a megacryometeor is.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Recommended even if you read all the website articles...
By C Winger
It's an excellent compliment to the [...] website. The book compiles (and in some cases expands or summarizes) many of the best online articles.

There are a few brand new articles containing subject matter not already published on the website (see below for a list).

Another thing I like about the book is that it has some articles that combine and summarize multiple similar web articles (like Cognitive Glitches).

Many of the article titles in the book are different than titles on the website.

I was going to buy this book even if the authors decided to only use the existing online content. It was an added bonus to see new material. Here are articles that I found to be exclusive to the book (at the time of this writing) :

*Animal Weaponry
*Cognitive Glitches
*Deep Water Mysteries
*Kowloon: The Walled City of Darkness
*The McCollum Memo
*Peculiar Parasites
*The Revelations of Restored Sight
*Sylbaris The Survivor
*Unanticipated Side Effects
*Walking Corpse Syndrome
*Weird Weaponry

Again, some of the above "new" articles contain pieces and summaries of existing online articles, but the writers added a fair amount of interesting fresh content.

Highly recommended!

See all 30 customer reviews...

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