When Did Wild Poodles Roam the Earth?
Written by David Feldman
Narrated by David Feldman
2.5/5
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About this audiobook
David Feldman
David Feldman, MD, is Emeritus Professor of Medicine (Active) at Stanford University School of Medicine where he has been on the faculty since 1974. He has been a full professor since 1984 and was chief of the Endocrinology Division for 10 years. His laboratory studies the role of steroid hormone receptors, particularly the vitamin D receptor, and its mechanism of action. His current major research focus is hormone-dependent cancer including breast cancer and prostate cancer and the pathways by which vitamin D inhibits cancer growth. Professor Feldman is actively involved in both basic science approaches to the anti-cancer actions of vitamin D as well as to clinical trials studying the use of vitamin D in breast and prostate cancer. Professor Feldman was recently honored with an award for a Career of Outstanding Contributions to Vitamin D Research. He has authored over 290 medical research articles, reviews, editorials, and book chapters. In addition to being a co-editor of all four editions of OSTEOPOROSIS, he is the editor-in-chief of Vitamin D, just published in its third edition.
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Reviews for When Did Wild Poodles Roam the Earth?
2 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I felt that this book was only mildly interesting. The questions (called "Imponderables") were a little inconsistent: some could have been answered with a little common sense while others needed actual research. The answers were also a bit inconsistent, with some just a paragraph and others two pages or more. The author did try to make the answers amusing, but often ended up being snarky or just dumb. Also, the questions were on such random topics that going from one to the next was usually a large jump. I became annoyed that the answers presented were quite superficial, and presented by the author as if he believed the readers could not possibly understand all the details (or maybe he's the one that was baffled), which I found extremely irritating. Although his sources (usually PR people for manufacturers) were named, he seemed to prefer direct communication and avoid any print sources that could have given the interested reader a chance to find out more. In the end, I was disappointed.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I'm getting fairly annoyed with these Imponderables books... It seems like each one I read is a bit worse then the last. It came to mind while reading this one that there is one VERY huge flaw in this serious: NOT. SOLVING. ANYTHING. What do I mean? I mean the questions that are so painstakingly "researched" and "selected" and "answered"... many of them aren't *really* answered in the book at all. Waaaaay too many of the questions in this book have answers that are basically "well, we can't track down the *real* answer, but here are a few of our best guesses". WTF is up with that? If you can't answer the question, why say you can, and why publish it?