Books about Excruciating from Amazon.com



More Anguished English: an Expose of Embarrassing Excruciating, and Egregious Errors in English
All the joy of the best-selling  Anguished English is back! 2,000 all-new  side-splitting flubs, fluffs, and hilariously funny  accidental assaults on our language .
Price: $2.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Excruciating History of Dentistry: Toothsome Tales & Oral Oddities from Babylon to Braces
For those on both sides of the dreaded dentist's chair, James Wynbrandt has written a witty, colorful, and richly informative history of the art and science of dentistry To all of those dental patients whose whine rises in tandem with that of the drill, take note: You would do well to stifle your terror and instead offer thanks to Apollonia, the patron saint of toothache sufferers, that you face only fleeting discomfort rather than the disfiguring distress, or slow agonizing death oft meted out by dental-care providers of the past. The transition from yesterday's ignorance, misapprehension, and superstition to the enlightened and nerve-deadened protocols of today has been a long, slow, and very painful process.For example, did you know that: *Among the toothache remedies favored by Pierre Fauchard, the father of dentistry, was rinsing the mouth liberally with one's own urine.*George Washington never had wooden teeth. However, his chronic dental problems may have impacted the outcome of the American Revolution. *Soldiers in the Civil War needed at least two opposing front teeth to rip open powder envelopes. Some men called up for induction had their front teeth extracted to avoid service. *Teeth were harvested from as many as fifty thousand corpses after the Battle of Waterloo, a huge crop later used for dentures and transplants that became known as "Waterloo Teeth."
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Price: $9.63 [Notify me when price goes down.]


British Teeth: An Excruciating Journey from the Dentist's Chair to the Rotten Heart of a Nation
Bone loss, discoloration, abscesses, faulty fillings, collapsed bites, gum disease, microcracks, mercury leaks… The decline and fall of British teeth—and the British nation?.
Price: $42.61 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Cake or Death: The Excruciating Choices of Everyday Life
A brilliant new book from one of Canada’s most popular columnists – a no-holds-barred riposte to the mess we’ve made of things.

"Mrs. Tittlemouse is heaven in a sponge mop. I read Beatrix Potter’s books as a child and love her paintings, her stories, her home-boiling of squirrels so her watercolours could be anatomically exact. But most of all, Beatrix Potter made domesticity desirable. All right, she didn’t, but she domesticated me. Personal order has become my badge and it’s the only thing that really works with melancholy."

Heather Mallick is sorely disappointed. The world has not turned out quite the way she had hoped it would. But rather than retreat from it, she takes the world head on, fearlessly and formidably on her own terms.

In a new work of entirely original writing, we have Heather unplugged (some might even say unhinged), and uncensored from the restrictions of her Globe and Mail column writing. As her many fans have come to expect from her, she is incisive and outrageous, whether she’s cataloguing the many situations and items in our daily lives that we are told we should fear, teaching us how to cope with people we just can’t stand (ruthless mockery is the key, really, says Heather) or writing about the valuable life lesson to be learned from one of her childhood heroes: Mrs. Tittlemouse, the original domestic goddess.

A candid reflection on the complicated state of our lives and our world today, viewed through the lens of Heather’s inimitable wit and outlook on life, Cake or Death: The Excruciating Choices of Everyday Life will provoke and delight readers..
Price: $32.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Excruciating Sickle Cell Pain Often Undertreated.: An article from: Family Practice News
This digital document is an article from Family Practice News, published by International Medical News Group on October 1, 1999. The length of the article is 554 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Excruciating Sickle Cell Pain Often Undertreated.
Author: Carl Sherman
Publication:Family Practice News (Magazine/Journal)
Date: October 1, 1999
Publisher: International Medical News Group
Volume: 29 Issue: 19 Page: 40

Distributed by Thomson Gale.
Price: $5.95 [Notify me when price goes down.]


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