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Imponderables (book series)

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Imponderables is a series of eleven books written by David Feldman. The books examine, investigate, and explain common, yet puzzling phenomena. Examples include "Why do your eyes hurt when you are tired?", "Why do judges wear black robes?", and "Why do you rarely see purple Christmas lights?", among many others. The word "imponderable" is used to describe such mysteries of everyday life. The books are effectively a frequently asked questions list for people who wonder why and how the world works as it does. The first book in this series was published in 1986.

The books in the series (each named after an imponderable covered in the book) are:

  • Imponderables (Reissued as Why Don't Cats Like to Swim?), Harper, ISBN 978-0060751487
  • Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise?, Harper, ISBN 978-0060740924
  • When Do Fish Sleep?, Harper, ISBN 978-0060740931
  • Why Do Dogs Have Wet Noses?, Harpercollins, ISBN 978-0060921118
  • Do Penguins Have Knees?, Harper, ISBN 978-0060740917
  • When Did Wild Poodles Roam the Earth? (Reissued as Are Lobsters Ambidextrous?), Harper, ISBN 978-0060762957
  • How Does Aspirin Find a Headache?, Harper, ISBN 978-0060740948
  • What Are Hyenas Laughing At, Anyway?, Berkley, ISBN 978-0425154519
  • How Do Astronauts Scratch an Itch?, Berkley, ISBN 978-0425159842
  • Do Elephants Jump?
  • Why Do Pirates Love Parrots?

The books also feature additional chapters on Frustables, which are defined as imponderables that are uniquely frustrating because they lack a clear answer.

Some of the recurring frustables are:

Feldman also wrote one Imponderables book solely about linguistic mysteries, entitled Who Put the Butter in Butterfly? The book deals with the mysterious origins of names and phrases in the English language.

The term "Imponderables" is a trademark.

See also