![]() If you can stomach it (heehee!), I do recommend this. That will obviously not be the case for all of you. I’ve worked in healthcare for years, so I’ve developed a pretty strong stomach (though I’m not a nurse or CNA and haven’t ever had to wade into the trenches, so to speak), so nothing in here bothered me. ![]() Luckily my husband and I have the same sense of humor so he just kept playing whatever game on his phone as I laughed myself silly and waited for me to catch my breath and report so he could share in the joke too. ![]() And there!” I’m almost ashamed of myself. Not that it was necessarily that funny but because “Oh my gosh, I can’t believe she went there. In the two chapters devoted to flatulence, I was quite honestly laughing so hard I couldn’t breathe. I have a pretty juvenile sense of humor, so all of the fart jokes, and spit jokes, and *ahem* “criminal accomplice” jokes had me at least giggling. Bite.) to the miraculous properties of spit, from being eaten alive to the possibility (or not) of chewing your way out if you are, from “The alimentary canal as criminal accomplice” to *ahem* flatus, and ending up with bacterial transplants to treat intractable digestive ailments, this book asks everything you might possibly have ever wanted to know on the topic but were afraid to ask. In this book, she tackles the digestive system.Ĭovering topics ranging from thorough chewing (as in 700+ chews for One. ![]() Mary Roach has a gift for making science accessible and–dare I say it?–even funny. ![]()
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