Welcome to Stuff to Blow Your Mind from how Stuff works dot Com. Hey, welcome to Stuff to Blow your Mind. My name is Robert Lamb and I'm Julie Douglas and this is our second summer Reading episodes for this year. Again. Last year we did an episode where Julie and I shared some some recommendations a little science a little fiction, a little science fiction for our more enlightened listeners, to listeners out there who might want to read something during
their travels around the beach. Everyone seemed to get a kick out of it, so we thought, let's do it again, except let's do an extra episode where we we have some guests come on and shared their ideas of about what you might want to read this summer. Uh so that's what this episode is all about. We have three external guests from the outside world and three internal guests from how stuff works dot com. Mry guests, yes, but pretty soon not so much a mystery. So we're gonna
kick things off here with an external guest. The man by the name of DJ Food also goes by the name strictly keV. He is a UK DJ, performing artist and overall connoisseur of all things weird and wonderful in the areas of music, comics, sci fi needs to say. Food has a really busy schedule, but I said, hey, I'll reach out to him. He's he's involved in all
these very cool projects. He's he's constantly keeping track of interesting books, interesting music, interesting comics on his website dj food dot org, where he's constantly sharing his his own music, his own mixes, his uh stuff about his lawyerst album, as well as all sorts of cool comics, lots of cool design stuff. Highly recommend checking that out. And now let's hear from the man himself with three recommendations for
your summer reading. Hi, I'm DJ Food otherwise owned a strictly keb and I'm here to present it three things to blow your mind. First off, I've got a great book called King City by an artist in rights called Brandon Graham who's kind of tearing things in the comics world at the moment. For the company image, King's City is I think twelve issues collected of a comic that completely passed me by. The story is revolves around a
number of people who live in King City. The city is kind of the star of the book, but there's a guy who's a cat master, who's kind of like a ninja master of a cat that can do all sorts of crazy things and change its body and stuff. And there's an adventure of him, and there's a venture of his ex girlfriend. There's eventually his friend whose name
escapes me now. But one of the things I like about it is there's masses of detail on every page and suddenly you'll dip into a cross word or join the dots page or a game, even on a double page spread. So it's a very unique way of storytelling and it's a good page turn. So if you think you know comics, you know, if we both know, I'm sure everyone your your listeners know that it's not all about d C and Marvel and guys and tights and capes. This is this is something that anyone could get into.
You never have to really read a comic, mer are It's not just a guy thing you can except you know easily, girls can get into it, no problem. So there you go. Not a very description, but it's it's a very unique comic. So that's my first one. The second one is another huge book copendium by Julian Cope. You might know Julian Cope, the should I say rock star singer artists recording artist spun to fame over here anyway in the UK with the teardrop explodes. Um. He's
also a very good writer. If you ever find his biography head on, it's well worth reading. But this is something else. It's it's a collection of his album reviews he used to do on his website, sort of arranged in the sort of chronological alternate history of rock writing from the last half of the twentieth century. It starts at the end of the fifties. We all know the accepted classics of rock led Zeppelin, the Who, the Beatles of Stones, etcetera, etcetera. This is an alternate version of that.
It's um the things that fell under the radar, the weird and the one for all the private pressings, the oddities that he thinks that just as worthy as any Beatles album but never got the kudos. So um, it's a very very readable book. Again, he's got an excellent turn of phrase, a sort of mixed of sort of Hippie and Celtic if that makes any sense. And just I always enjoy reading his stuff. As I said, his
biography head on is incredible. Um, he's had a very interesting life and he's got a very unique tape on music. It's as good as any writer you're reading the Music press or on online Indium and Expedition into the Rock and Roll Underground by Julian Cope. And last, but not least, we have Watching the Watchman by Dave Gibbons, designed by Chick Kidd and Mike Essel. And I'm sure a lot of readers or listeners would know Watchman the comic Animore and Ve Gibbons classic, you know, one of the first
graphic novels in inverted commas. This is a huge each cover table book which basically explores the artwork at the background and the genesis of the whole thing, including never seen before artwork, preliminary designs, layouts for pages, promotional items, original drawings, merchandise, the whole thing from start to finish in order of the creation of Watchman by Dave Gibbons, laid out superbly by the designership Kid with lots of
very very magnified illustrations splashed across the pages so you really get into the grain of the book, and running commentary by Dave Gibbons talking about the genesis of the book, how he put it together, how we designed things, lots of little clues which I'd never seen in the original comics that he put in for people to find, and just a very interesting historical look back at the classic basically the making of a classic, and how the comics
industry changed from the beginning of the book to two years later when it finished and it was it literally did help change the comics industry overnight. Cool. I think those are all three very interesting recommendations there. I was, of course, I'm familiar with Watchman. Everyone I think it's familiar with Watchman at this point, a very important comic book.
And uh, and it would be interesting for anyone out there who's a fan to check out, um this this new volume that gives even more visual insight into that world. And uh, the other comic that Food mentioned, King City, I have not read, but wow, I was just looking at some of the visuals from this and it looks phenomenal. One of the skills we were looking at here involved like a space suit and kind of adorable cats crawling
all over the place. It's it's really wonderful looking. And as far as Julian Cope goes, I think you had some experience. Yeah. Yeah, Julian Couple was definitely in heavy rotation some number of years ago in our household. And I have to say, my husband's kind of mixed mixed master and he's the person who curates the music in our house. So um, I think that this will be in an awesome there's day present for him because he
is a huge Julian Cope fan. And now I have absolutely like, I mean going home after this and I'm gonna put some Julian Cope in rotation because I that's some good stuff. So I can't wait to check that out. Now, since that book deals with with music, I would like to play just a quick clip from DJ Foods two thou twelve albums The Search Engine, which includes this track the Electric Hoax featuring Natural Self, which really seems to to summon some of the vibes that are discussed in
this in this book. Yeah ye see. And next we are going to listen to Lauren vogel Bond's recommendations. She is the co host of tech Stuff and forward Thinking and just all around wonderful person. Yes, definitely a bookworm. So when we set out to do this episode. I was like, well, we gotta ask Lauren, because she's one of these people that will bring you books and set them on your desk and uh and and give you strong recommendations on one which you need to read. And
so she has a couple here for you. Hey. There, I'm Lauren Vogelbaum. I'm the co host of tech Stuff and also Forward Thinking, and I've got a couple of recommendations for your summer reading list. This first one is a book that you'd find in the Kids too Young Adults section, but I think it's a good choice for
all ages. It's called The Gate. It's by John Connolly, and the reason that I'm recommending it is Okay, the crux of the plot of this book rests on two things, large Hadron collider and a demon horde that is trying to come through it in order to take over the world. And that seems like prime stuff to blow your mind fan material right there. The language in it is is really just cheeky and hilarious. It's got science and fantasy.
There's a ton of footnotes, all the stuff that I really love in a good young adult book about demons and science, and at its core, it's it's really about a very clever boy and his extremely brave docs, and it's it's heart woman and wonderful and uh, if young adult is not necessarily your thing, Connolly has a lot of other books for children and adults, and I recommend most of them. My second wreck on the list is
called The Magicians. It's by Love Grossman, and this one is for grown ups only, or mature audiences or immature mature audiences. I'm never really sure why mature is the word that they choose to use when they're saying that there's sex and alcohol use in a book. But it's sort of like if Harry Potter had been set in
college and involved an extremely disaffected main character. The reason that I'm recommending this one specifically is that, um, it's got a system of magic in it, and uh, the magical ability in this universe is based on a level of creativity and intelligence in a person, in addition to a a psyche breaking level of study that essentially renders magicians, uh, not really operating under the normal confines of what we
would call sanity anymore. And to me, that's fascinating watching these characters kind of go through this process and deal with it and also deal with normal coming of age, growing up sort of things. Also with within the story, there's there's a series of fictional books about a magical land called Philery, and this is a direct parallel to the Narnia land and books and theories by C. S. Lewis.
When I was a kid, I loved Narnia, and the protagonist of the Magicians was a huge fan of the Philery books when he was a kid, and it becomes really a very important part of the story. And just watching what Grossman does with that source material, if you know the Narnia books, becomes immensely fun. The book is dry and very rilely funny and very poignant. It's it's beautiful and heartbreaking and winds up being very hopeful in in strange and lovely ways. Also there's a sequel and
that is on my summer reading list. So I hope that you guys check out one or both of these. If you do, tell Robert and Julie how you feel about them, or if you want to, you can drop me an email. You can reach me at tech stuff at Discovery dot com, and I would love to hear
from you and uh yeah, enjoy your summer now. I think it's it's awesome that she she brought up The Magicians by Love Grossman because my wife just finished reading this book and is already on the second book that it follows it, and just just a word of caution.
When she was first reading it, I had actually given it to her as a birthday gift, so she first when she first started reading it, she was like, you know, it's it's all right, It's all right, And then she definitely reached a point where then she was just just completely obsessed with it. Uh. And this is this world of magic that it creates. So um So if you pick it up and it's not getting you right away, just just wait because if this test case proves to
be accurate, um, it will get his hooks into you. Well. I kind of have a hundred page rule, Like if I'm hundred page pages into it and it's not really gripping me, then I kind of feel like, Okay, maybe it's not the thing for me. Although I really do prefer to finish a book. Yeah, and its entirety, but I do feel like sometimes it takes a while for the author to kind of get into the material and lay it all down to where you're you're firmly set
in the trap. Yeah, I feel like a hundred page rule is pretty fair because because on one hand, you don't want to quit books and put them back on the shelf or return them unfinished, and you know, you want to get your money's worth out of it. You don't want to be a quitter. But on the other hand, life is short. You can only read so many books in this life, and it's just not worth it to struggle through when you're not enjoying. And I know people who refuse to give up, like it'll be for months.
They're complaining about this book they're reading, and you're you're like, don't finish it. What are you doing? I've done it twice twice. One was a book that had been us in the title, and I can't remember it, but I was just I think I actually threw it across the the room, um. And then the second one. And I would love to pick this up sometime when I have like one thousand weeks in a row just to do nothing,
and that is the infinite just which I think. I was on page two hundred and eighty and then I went, Okay, I can't. Yeah, and it was. And it was so frustrating to me because this story, the characters were very intriguing, but there was so much bobbing and weaving between that I kept feeling as though I was dumped on the side as a reader and would have to keep sort of picking back up. So emotionally, I was like, oh, but I was really invested in this, sorry, and here
I am in some other world. Well, you know, it's I'm a big believer in the right book for the right time. You know, sometimes it'll it'll be a great book, and it will even be a great book for you, but you have to be in the proper headspace for it. You've got to have the right appetite for it at the time. I mean, we all have those books on our shelves who are like, oh, I really would love
to read that, but it's just not time yet. I would love to hear from a listener who has read Infinite just all the way through, and I would love to know whether or not it really lives up to the hype, Like if you put one thousand pages of reading into it, will you feel like you had a return on investment. On the other side, so if anybody's
out there, let us know. Alright, up next, we're gonna hear from Mary Roach, who was, of course the author of Stiff Spook, Bonk Packing from Ours and most recently Gold. Of course you've heard us talk about golf. You've heard us interview Mary Roach about this book. Uh. And and we we we read it and ended up doing a number of episodes on Digestion as a spinoff from it. So of course we highly recommend any book by Mary
Roach Beach. But but we we also in our recent talk whether we asked Mary, it's like, well, what books are you excited about? Because I'm always interested in that, you know, what's feeding the minds of the minds that feed us. Uh. And she had a couple of really tantalizing suggestions for your summer reading. There's a book that is coming out by John Mullum uh M O O
A L. L. E. M. Called Wild Ones. And John Lallum he wrote, I don't know if you saw it was a cover story in the New York Times magazine about homosexuality and animals and people who study it. And and he is just the most amazing in terms of his research, his ability to write beautiful essay and this
it's just this writing style, and it's this wonderful book. Well, it's about how endangered species and and and basically humans and how we see animals and what we decide to save and what we don't decide to save, and just the the unique views of humans, the approach towards different animal species over the years. And it's very hard to describe that book in a way that captures the sparkle and interests of it. Anyway, I love that book and that is coming out, I believe in May. Yeah, so
that's coming up. I'm trying to think what else I've seen that is coming up. Rose George who wrote that wonderful book on that called The Big Necessity, which I had to do with poop and sanitation and the global need for clean bathrooms. A lovely science writer, fascinating book, and she has a new one coming out on shipping global the world behind the scenes world of shipping, which is not science, it's not exactly science, but in terms
of how things work. Just I can't wait to read it, just just because you know, everything's shipped and it's this sort of secret network that's out there and nobody really knows much about it, and she spent a year on ships and in shipyards and really uh sharreting that out. So I'm looking forward to that one very much too. So there, yeah, there you go. Uh. That shipping book sounds really interesting. Unfortunately, as of the publication date of
this particular episode, that book is not out yet. Definitely, as you're listening to this in the future, uh, it is probably already available, but as of now, you're gonna have to wait on that, and instead you'll have to go after The Big Necessity, which seems like an awesome
book on its own, very interesting. Um. I also wanted to point out that Rose George was a war correspondent and she also has a book out on refugees, so it seems to me like she has covered the spread no matter what the topic, as she does some deep dives on that and John mullum um the Wild Ones book.
I can't wait to pick that up because I keep thinking that that would be a really nice companion book to the book we discussed last year, which was Some we Love, Some we Hate, and Some We Eat, which at our relationship with animals and Malalam just kind of takes it sounds like a different look at animals and how we perceive them. And in fact, we have referenced one of his articles before when we talked about homosexuality and animals. Very interested to see what other sort of
discoveries he has in that book. Cool, you know, we're gonna we're gonna take a quick break and when we come back, we will hit you with three more guests. Um, just throw them at you, Just throw them at you. Two of them are going to be in house here from some House Stuff Works podcasters that you you may or may not be familiar with already. And then we're also gonna hear from one more guest. Is Tracy thisling Tracy alright, color back right after these uh these words.
All right, we're back and uh for this. For this half of the episode, we're gonna kick things off with Tracy V. Wilson, one of the long term of Faces Voices writers here the rock of How Stuff Works. Yeah, she's uh, she's the site manager as well as co host of formerly of Pop Stuff and currently of Stuff you Missed in a history class. So obviously we turned
to Tracy. We know she's a big reader, really into sci fi and fantasy and writer herself writer herself that she's an and a poet, and we said, well, hey, let's uh, let's let's reach it out out to her, see what she's got. And we just said, hey, whatever you want to recommend to our listeners, let us have it. So here you go. Hi. My name is Tracy V. Wilson, co host of Stuff You Missed in History Class, and
here's my contribution to your summer reading list. It is a combination of history and science fiction called The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis. It came out in and it's about a world where historians study history by actually traveling back in time to observe things. And in this book, our histor, Orion, our hero of the story, is traveling back to the Middle Ages, and she is the first historian ever to do this. Of course, things do not go as planned, either in the Middle Ages or back home.
It is a page turner and I hope you all enjoy it. Well, that one sounds fun, That one sounds uh, you know, it's a little sort of time travel thrown in there. I knew that she is a fan of that, even in her own writing, So yeah, be interesting to check out. All right. Up next, we're gonna hear from
David Barnett, who is an English journalist and author. You may have seen his work and wired, Uh, the Independent, and he's also a regular contributor to Tour Books, the blog over there which it covers a lot of fantasy, sci fi literary stuff. And I actually block a little bit over there at tour Um, so I said, hey, well it's let me reach out and see whoever at tour will be interested in talking to us and sharing
some work with us. David also is a novelist. He's written the books The Hinterland, Angel, Glass, Pop Cult, Don't Let Them Take You Alive and Uh. He also has a book called Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl, which is alternative history, steam bunk Victorianism, just a lot of fun stuff thrown in there. And he has some some more horror themed books for us for those of you who want something a little spooky or a little grimmer for your summer reading. So let's hear from David. Hello.
My name is David Barnett, and I'm an author and journalist based in the North of England, where I live with my wife Claire and our children Charlie and Alice. The first book in my alternate history Victoriana series, Gideon Smith and the Mechanical Girl, is published in September by Tall Books in the US and Snow Books in the UK, and you can find my writing on science fictional matters, among other things, at Tall dot com and other places.
I'd like to recommend for your summer reads a couple of books that are very different but which could be said to be thematically linked. They're all horror books, and although at least two of them do actually deal with a supernatural, they're all notable for routing their individual horrors very much in the real world by way of a firm grounding in science. The first book I'd like to talk about is Red Moon by Benjamin Percy, which was
published in May. Red Moon is in essence a werewolf book, but Percy kind of expertly brings his wolf men and wolf women out from the shadows cast by the full moon and puts them under a very contemporary and scientific spotlight. In the world of Red Moon, werewolves or likens as the non to the general public, aren't the product of the occult or the supernatural, but rather those who have
been infected by a prion based BSc type disease. This can and is often passed on by way of a bite in the traditional werewolf style, or by other sharings of bodily fluids. As as Percy goes into quite a bit. He is an associate editor for Esquire Magazine. Is writing is very cool and assured and sexy. Red Moon is set in the modern day, but in a world that's been greatly changed by the existence of Likens for a century or more. So. It's kind of alternate history, retrofitted
history in itself. In the present day of the book, Likens our government registered. They have to keep the transformations under control with strict usage of government proved drugs. There's actually a Like and Homeland, which is created from a vast tract of wasteland between Finland and Russia, where American martial law is established to look after things. Western companies
mind the rich uranium reserves. Their American troops are actually fighting kind of an Afghanistan style war against Like and Rebels in the mountains of this early godforsaken landscape, and Red Moon kind of is about how the Like and Rebels are bringing the war home to America and the Lins in person's book kind of double for any number of ethnic or minority groups, and their history in the US has parallels with the civil rights movements of the sixties, Islamophobia,
fundamental terrorism in the present day pro fight. It's a very kind of post nine eleven sort of book, and Percy quite deftly tells all sides of the story by following different characters with different objectives, different viewpoints. So there's very much an anti like and senator who's running for president.
There's a young guy who's the main focus of the book whose father is away with the army fighting in the like and homeland, and there's a young woman who's her self alike, and and all these stories, as you would expect, come together for a fairly explosive climax. And it's a very ns blockbuster of a novel, as much a political thriller as it is a horror novel. I think.
Another book which is heavy on the science, though it does bring supernatural elements to the four quite more than Red Moon is Revivor by Seth Patrick, which is out in the middle of June, and this takes another standard horror trope, which is people who can talk to the dead, which we've seen a lot in movies and books, but
it gives it a very smart and glossy modern twist. Basically, revive a twelve years or so before the action in the book, the world discovers the existence of these people who can, by touching the hands of the flesh of the dead shortly after they've died, have conversations with them temporarily bring them back to life, only for a few minutes,
but it enables them to have brief conversations with them. Obviously, this is greeted with a wide range of panic and then interest and curiosity, but it isn't very long before the military and the police applications of this come to the fall. So by the time the action in the book takes place, which is so modern day criminal investigations,
homicide investigations especially heavily using revivers. They can bring murder victims back to life at the scene for a few minutes, and those mode of victims can immediately identify their killers, so it changes the whole face of criminal investigations. The book follows a guy called Joan and Miller who was a forensic reviver. He's brought into murder scenes to question the newly dead about the moments that led to their killings.
It's it's quite tough, demanding work. It really takes it out of these revivers that these guys doing this, It really sort of hammers them both psychically and psychologically and physically. Jonah finds himself increasingly troubled by the revivals he is doing, not just because of the exhaustion it brings on, but because he can't shake the feeling that when he starts to temporarily revive the dead, there's kind of some other presence that's lurking on the edges and wanting to come through.
It's revives great edge of the seat read which possibly owes more to shiny, high tech TV crime shows than a traditional horror. It's kind of like C S I Zombie, something like that, Patrick pals On. The tension doesn't spur the shocks, and it keeps the revelations coming thick and fast. So it's a really good summer blockbuster read again. The third book I'd like to do our attention to is one that has been it a little longer than though that those of us. It's called London Falling by Paul Cornell.
Now this is much heavier on the supernatural, but it does taken a lot of scientifics the side of it, not so much with the technical side of things, but more in the science of police work really, So it has some parallels with Reviving that it concentrates on the police work and how that is linked to the supernatural in this story, but it's much much grittier, much more
down to earth. It uh, It's London Falling, concentrates on the science really of old school policing as seen through the eyes of a bunch of coppers in present day London. Paul Cornell is perhaps more well known for his comic book work. He's currently the addor of Wolverine from Marvel, and he's also a lot of TV work, written some Doctor Who episodes, and this is his first novel and
it's very accomplished, inspired and genuinely scary. I think, possibly more scary than the other two books, which are more thriller type novels, but this, this, I think ticks all
the old style horror boxes. The story follows this team of police detectives and they're investigating series of child disappearances in London, and they slowly become to realize that This is looks like the work of a woman who should be along dead, and she's got some strange links to an English football team that's socked team for American listeners, west Ham United, and it sounds quite odd on paper,
but Cornell really pulls all these strands together. It's very British, though in in my copy he does helpfully provide a glossary of terms at the back of the book that's perhaps as much for other English readers as it is for American readers because a lot of its London Company Eastern type stuff. So it's quite interesting that respect, and it's very um It would possibly appeal to anyone who may have enjoyed Hell Blazer John Constantine comics from Vertigo.
It's that kind of rough and ready sort of horror, and if anyone out there remembers the Sweeney the older seventies British Cops show with JOHNA. Thorne Dennis Waterman, it's that kind of don't and dirty vibe with this gritty, grimy urban horror. And there's a there's an amazing revelation involving one of the main characters which absolutely not my socks off when it comes and I bet it does the same friend on Nels who reads it as well,
And so those really am I recommended summer reads. There perhaps a little dark for summer, but I think they'll definitely stick in your mind. And the perfect beach reads to my mind. Cool. Well, I you know, I'm particularly interested in Benjamin Percy's Red Moon, the idea of taking taking the werewolf myth and then explaining it with a little science, throwing in some pyon diseases in there. It's
I love new takes on old monsters. Yeah, and well, the werewolf is I think just a great classic monster. So anyway that you can sort of get to that story in a new and refreshing way, I'm all for that. Let's go on to our last contributor. Here is Christen Conger, she of Stuff Mom Never Told You. He has a great recommendation, and here it is. Hey, this is Kristen Conger, co host of Stuff Mom Never Told You, and my summer book reading recommendation is Breasts, A Natural and Unnatural
History by Florence Williams. I literally took it with me to the beach last week when I went on a brief vacation and dived right into it and it's a fascinating look at both the evolution and science of human breasts and also our cultural associations with it. How breast implants became a thing. Hint it has to do with paraffin injections, yikes. And Florence Williams is a great job using really engaging language to draw you into not only
the science but also the cultural history of breasts. So if you want to bring a book to the pool side or beach side with you that Mike get some looks because it does say press on the cover. I highly recommend it. It's a really great read and it appeals to the brainier side and also the lady's side, And so yeah, check it out. Florence Williams Breasts and Natural and Unnatural History. Well, there you go. The science, the biology, the history of breast sounds like a good
place to to end out the podcast. I cannot actually wait to check out this book myself, because I think that it's one of those things that well, you can't deny. All of us have breast real female right so um as we discussed in our milk episode, and men have all the same equipment and under the right circumstances can certainly lacktate as well, so we all have breasts well
and culturally this is a huge thing right for us. Um. Sorry that there's I feel like there are breast chips right there in the surface and I will try not
to touch them. But well, there he goes again. Uh So, anyway, I just wanted to point out that on Slate this week, one of the top performing articles was about bras and about how there's new sizes something like ten different new sizes that are coming out because apparently the broad industry is servicing women in an all together wrongheaded manner um. And I thought that was fascinating. I thought this one article on sort of revamping the bra industry is number
one for this week on Slate. Well, it directly influences like half the population, So there you go. That's right. Well awesome. Well, I would like to personally thank all of the the individuals who took time out of their schedule in house or elsewhere in the world and on other continents to to talk with us, to think think it over and come up with some books and and share you know, their their ideas and share the stuff
they love with you. Guys. I think it's it's easy to overlook how cool that is because so many times people who produce content, uh, you know, you get pped up in in your own stuff, creating your own stuff, promoting your own stuff, and it's it's it's really cool when somebody takes some time to say, you know what, this is the stuff I love that influences me, but it's not of me, and I would like to to share it. So so thanks to to everybody who who
chimed in. As for the rest of you, uh, some of you are probably wondering, oh, what was that book that that food was talking about? What was the name of that author that that that conger or or Lauren mentioned, how do you spell that? Well, be sure to go to our website, Stuff to Blow your Mind dot com and that's where everything is. That's our mothership. That's also
where the blog posts are. And there is a blog post accompanying these episodes that will have a complete list of all the book recommendations, both the ones that that Julie and I made in the previous episode and the guest recommendations in this episode, all and went easy to handle list with links and everything that you could desire. So be sure to check that out. You can also check us out at various social media outlets. We're on Facebook, We're on Twitter, We're on tumbler, and on YouTube. Are
handle is mind Stuff Show. And please do share your thoughts with us on the recommendations that we gave, recommendations that our guests gave, and what you also recommend and you can do so by sending us an email at below the Mind at Discovery dot com. And I'm going to close out here with just a little bit of music from DJ Food from his album two thousand and twelve album The Search Engine, which is amazing. You should check it out. More information about it at DJA food
dot org or Ninja tune dot net. This track is colors. Beyond the colors at the upper end of the electromagnetic spectrum is energy of short wave length and very EMag frequency gamma raised X ray and dra a violet rate. For more on this and thousands of other topics because it how stuff works dot com. Next comes the end
of energy. We can see with violet light at the high energy and to bend down to the green yellow our ange and read at the low frequency end below the bed, we can again no longer see the An
