I rate most books that I read at 3 stars or higher. Sadly, I made an exception for this book (wish I could rate it as 2 and 1/2 stars) because I felt like the description/title were a bit misleading and the book contained at least 1 inaccurate "fact."
MISLEADING DESCRIPTION/TITLE
Based on the description and title, I was expecting a book filled with WORLD HISTORY FACTS that are true, but sound false. While this interesting book does contain lots of historical world facts, it also contains a huge amount of RANDOM FACTS ABOUT WOMEN (e.g., the first female mayor in the U.S. was X, the first female hispanic astronaut was Y, etc.). Nothing wrong with those facts, but they don't seem to fit in with world history facts (e.g., during the Great Depression, people made clothes out of potato sacks, the Americans used inflatable tanks to fool the Nazis during during WWII, etc.). I wish the author described and/or titled the book as containing a significant number of random facts about women so that readers understood what they are buying.
INACCURATE "FACT"
The book also contained at least one false statement of "fact." Page 102 states that "Carrots aren't actually good for your eyes..." In fact, carrots are widely known to be rich in beta-carotene — which the body converts to vitamin A, an essential nutrient for vision. Carrots also help protect against age-related eye diseases. Clearly, carrots are good for your eyes. However, I'm guessing the author probably intended to state that "carrots do not IMPROVE eye sight," which of course is not the same thing as what was stated in this book. After reading this inaccurate "fact," I began to question the accuracy of the other "facts" in this book... to be fair, I didn't check all facts in the book, so I have no idea if any other facts were also inaccurate.
On the positive side, the book does contain many interesting world history facts. So, it's not all bad. Just not exactly what I expected.