"An amusing expose." -- THE TIMES (LONDON)
"Fast-moving and entertaining." --KIRKUS REVIEWS
"Lachenmeyer's impressive historical research and quirky survey of present-day triskaidekaphobic practices provides a glimpse into irrationality and superstition through history." -- PUBLISHERS WEEKL Y
If thirteen people sit down at a table, will one die within a year? What is the only major New York hotel that has a thirteenth floor? What does it mean if a clock strikes thirteen?
In 13, a fascinating cultural history cure detective story, Nathaniel Lachenmeyer gets to the root of how one superstition--the fear of the number 13--developed among wildly divergent societies. A book about mythmaking, 13 explores why people believe what they believe, and the real reason Friday the 13th is the most unlucky day in the world.
Perhaps 13 is unlucky because the thirteenth letter of the Hebrew alphabet is the letter M, which is the first letter in the word mavet, meaning death. Or because there were thirteen attendees at the Last Supper when Jesus was betrayed. Or maybe it's just bad luck to be superstitious. In this one-of-a-kind book, Lachenmeyer probes the history of the world's scariest number.
Preface
CHAPTER 1 The Thirteen Club
CHAPTER 2 The Origins of Unlucky 13
CHAPTER 3 The Rise of I3
CHAPTER 4 The Sin of I3
CHAPTER 5 Friday the I3th
CHAPTER 6 The Missing 13
CHAPTER 7 The Psychology of 13
CHAPTER 8 Triskaidekaphobia Today
CHAPTER 9 Triskaidekaphilia Today
CHAPTER 10 Conspiratorial 13
CHAPTER 11 13 Phobes & Philes
CHAPTER 12 Triskaidekaphobe's Travel Guide
CHAPTER 13 The Future of 13
Selected Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index