Here's a short review from the Washington Post which I – being mostly lefthanded – enjoyed. I especially liked the first sentence.
Let’s get one thing straight: It’s not weird that 10 percent of the human population is left-handed. It’s weird that 90 percent is right-handed. In all other animals that show handedness (or pawedness or flipperedness), the split is virtually even. So why are humans so lopsided? Nobody really knows.
Sorry, that last line should have carried a spoiler alert, because it gave away the ending — and the middle and the beginning — of “The Puzzle of Left-Handedness.”
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Turns out it hasn’t always been that bad for lefties. Oh, sure, the left side of things has long been identified with darkness, magic, illness and death. And various cultures associate the left hand with — let’s just say — nasty functions. But all in all humans have conducted surprisingly little persecution of left-handed people, according to Smits. (Well, except for designing scissors, spiral notebooks, power tools and lots of other implements for the tyrannical convenience of the right-handed majority.)
Smits is no artist (unlike lefty all-stars da Vinci, Michelangelo and Raphael), statesman (unlike the five of seven most recent presidents who were left-handed) or super cool dude (unlike Jimi Hendrix and Paul McCartney), but he is a clever and thorough researcher. “The Puzzle of Left-Handedness” can get pedantic but is sprinkled with enough oddball characters and head-scratching factoids to keep you reading. Or at least 10 percent of you.
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