INTRODUCTION

I opened my first book, Now I Know, with a quote from Mark Twain that I think bears repeating, because it’s still just as correct and now twice as relevant: “Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn’t.”

The world is filled with stories that are literally incredible and unbelievable, shocking our sense of what’s possible. Nonetheless, they’re real. For more than four years, I’ve collected those stories—first as an ongoing e-mail newsletter; then as a book titled Now I Know, a precursor to this one; and now, in Now I Know More. You need not be familiar with either of this book’s precedents, though. All you need to be is curious about the world and the unlikely things that history, science, technology, and life have thrown at us.

For example, have you ever seen a word in a dictionary and didn’t think it was real? It may not have been. Or, doorknobs—everyone knows what they are, but why are they controversial . . . doubly so in Colorado? Of course, we all know that on 9/11, air traffic came to a halt. But how’d that happen, and what does it have to do with whales? For that matter, what does a home cleaning solution have to do with the War on Terror?

In the following stories and their bonus facts—each story has at least one bonus fact—we’ll tackle all of that and more. We’ll talk about the color pink, panda bears, shopping malls, birthdays, DNA, the post office, burritos, and a town that never existed. I’ve written these stories so that each one connects to the next in some way or another, because while I don’t expect you to read this book in one sitting, I hope that each piece of mind-blowing trivia will encourage you to explore further. After all, curiosity is what got you here in the first place. When you’re done with the book, don’t worry—there’s more. Every weekday, I send out a free e-mail newsletter with another one of these stories. You can get that at http://NowIKnow.com.

So let’s begin. Let’s steal the Empire State Building.

Really. That happened once. (Just go to the next page.)