Did you know that for science to build a human body, &lsquousing the obliging Benedict Cumberbatch as a template, would be a very precise £96,546.79&rsquo VAT extra, of course. Swabs from 60 American test subjects found &lsquo2,368 species of bacteria, 1,458 of which were unknown to science&rsquo in their belly buttons Your brain just requires&lsquo400 calories of energy a day&mdashabout the same as you get in a blueberry muffin&rsquo. Your hearing only requires &lsquothree tiny bones, some wisps of muscle and ligament, a delicate membrane and nerve cells&rsquo to give you a complete panoply of auditory experiences (expensive headphones, yes, I&rsquom looking at you while typing this). Were you aware that &lsquotaste receptors evolved for two deeply practical reasons to help us find energy-rich foods and to avoid dangerous ones&rsquo however, they aren&rsquot always up to fulfilling their roles, just ask best-selling author Nicholas evans about the mushroom incident of 2008. Your DNA, a metre of which is packed in every cell, is such &lsquothat if you formed all the DNA in your body into a single fine strand it would stretch ten billion miles, to beyond Pluto&rsquo. Bryson aptly describes the feeling in a sentence &lsquoYou are in the most literal sense cosmic&rsquo. And this is just scraping the surface. The hardbound book is divided into 23 chapters, each picking up a particular part of the human body or functions and diseases associated and he interweaves his words in his usual storytelling fashion, with rich anecdotes. The Body is Bryson&rsquos fascination with the working of human bodies as A Short History of Nearly Everything displayed his passion for science.