How could you read this subtitle and not be intrigued? I mean, you KNOW your parents have been lying to you, and now finally someone is going to tell you what about. (Incidentally, you know your parents lied to you as a child as soon as you have children of your own who are old enough to ask inane questions and do stupid things and you find yourself spouting the same warnings your parents said to you.)
I really liked Jennings's other books, so I figured his writing style and this topic were sure to be a hit. I read it super fast, and I did enjoy it, but not really as much as I expected. For one thing, a lot of the myths he debunks were kind of "Duh" to me. Plus, he quotes/recaps heavily from "MythBusters" and other non-Trade Marked myth busting entities, so it has the serious feel of borrowed research. I mean, he details his experience shaking a can of soda with his kids, then opening it up 5 minutes later to discover it not only doesn't explode, but barely fizzes (that one WAS surprising to me. When I told my husband about it, he didn't believe me. We are programmed by our parents to believe a shaken can of soda is a ticking time bomb. Look at it wrong and it's going to blow up in your face.) Anyway, my point is, he did this little "experiment" and it was fun to read about. But he doesn't even go to that much effort with most of the other topics. He just regurgitates what others have said/proven about it. So, I guess my point is, this book is informative, but felt thrown together and not as "personal" as it could have been.
Incidentally, I think I have a larger store of parental myths than most. My mom told me things with a straight face that are just straight-up crazy. One I would have liked to see Jennings debunk was when I was taking ballet and my mother warned me that if I ever did the splits (even once) I wouldn't be able to have babies. And that, my friends, is the reason I never became a professional dancer. That right there. I am, however, the mother of four children, so I guess I have my mom to thank for that.
PS- One myth this debunks is that you need to bathe or shower everyday. Once my kids robbed me of this luxury, I began to suspect it wasn't that necessary in the first place. If I work out that day, there is a shower, but otherwise, I might go a day or two, which Ken assures me is Just Fine. But anyway, my son was watching a Sesame Street DVD with an old music video clip called "The Ten Commandments of Health" (a parody of that Oldie, "The Ten Commandments of Love"), Anyway, one of the "commandments" was to bathe or shower every day, and I yelled at the TV: "No, Sesame Street! You are perpetuating a myth!" The muppets didn't seem to care, but I felt vindicated, thanks to having read this book.