Read The Unpersuadables: Adventures with the Enemies of Science Online
Authors: Will Storr
Tags: #BIO000000
UK Independence Party (UKIP)
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Ultimate Psychic Challenges, The
(TV Show)
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unconscious
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,
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US Armed Forces Institute of Pathology
119
Vipassana Meditation Centre
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,
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Vithoulkas, George
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voice-hearing
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,
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Warren, Jeff
76
Washington Post
(newspaper)
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,
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,
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water dreaming
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Watson, Rebecca
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‘we mode’
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Western medicine, disillusionment with
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Wexler, Bruce E.
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,
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‘wild pig, being a’
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Wilson, David Sloan
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Wilson, Timothy D.
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Wired
(magazine)
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Wiseman, Richard
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37
Wolpert, Lewis
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Wootton, David
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wormholes
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Wymore, Randy
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WILL STORR
is a novelist and longform journalist. He has reported from refugee camps in Africa, war-torn rural Colombia, and remote Aboriginal communities in Australia. He is a contributing editor at
Esquire
, and his stories have appeared in
The Observer, The Sunday Times
, and
The Guardian.
In 2012, he was presented with the Amnesty International award for his work on sexual violence against men. In 2013, his BBC radio series won the AIB award for best investigative documentary. He is author of
Will Storr vs. The Supernatural
and
The Hunger and the Howling of Killian Lone.
Jacket design and illustration by Adly Elewa
Printed in the United States Copyright © 2014 The Overlook Press
THE OVERLOOK PRESS
NEW YORK, NY
“Incontrovertibly brilliant.”
—ESQUIRE
“Throws new and salutary light on all our conceits and beliefs. Very valuable, and a great read to boot, this is investigative journalism of the highest order.”
—INDEPENDENT, BOOK OF THE WEEK
“Funny, serious, and richly vivid … Read this book.”
—DAILY TELEGRAPH
“Storr can open chapters like a stage conjurer, and his prose has an easy, laconic style, embracing Jon Ronson’s taste for the fabulously weird and Louis Theroux’s ability to put his subjects at ease. He is a funny and companionable guide … [who] confounds expectations.”
—GUARDIAN
“[Storr] seeks not to mock strange convictions but to get inside the minds of those who hold them. The result is an entertaining journey dotted with some fascinating reportage.”
—THE OBSERVER