Talk to Dr Karl Kruszelnicki on Your Station about Bumbreath, Botox and Bubbles

If you have you ever wanted to know how to resuscitate a man via his penis
or why birds of a feather flock together then look no further…

The colourful Dr Karl Kruszelnicki has all the answers in his latest book
Bumbreath, Botox and Bubbles.

And he’s happy to talk live to your listeners on your station.

Discover how champagne bubbles ‘pop’ into
existence, what causes that vile ‘morning breath’ and how a ‘sausage poison’
is helping fight the war against wrinkles.

Dr Karl’s ability to popularise science by making it fun and accessible is
what gives this author best-selling status. Bumbreath, Botox and Bubbles
offers a fascinating collection of quirky, factual discoveries in Dr Karl’s
own inimitable, friendly style.

To set up an interview, contact Aleta
Moriarty at Harper Collins Publishers on:
Tel: 02 9952 5473 or 0407 574 469
Fax: 02 9952 5666

Note: Aleta informs us that November dates have just about gone already. Now booking for December.

E: [email protected]
www.harpercollins.com.au

About Dr Karl

Karl Kruszelnicki used to be a ‘proper pukka scientist, engineer and
doctor’, but is currently an author and science commentator on radio and
television. He is the Julius Sumner Miller Fellow at the University of
Sydney, in the Science Foundation of the Physics Department.

Away from the media, he has worked as a physicist, labourer, roadie for
bands (including Bo Diddley), car mechanic, filmmaker, hospital scientific
officer, biomedical engineer (when he designed and built a machine to pick
up electrical signals from the human retina), TV weatherman, and medical
doctor at The Kids Hospital in Sydney. In addition to his degrees in Physics
and Mathematics, Biomedical Engineering, and Medicine and Surgery, he has
studied several non-degree years at various universities in Astrophysics,
Computer Science and Philosophy.

In the media, he has written and presented for such shows as Quantum, The
Midday Show and Good Morning Australia.
In radio, he speaks on-air for about
4 hours every week. This includes a national weekly, 1-hour science
talk-back show on Triple J. This show sometimes ‘crashes’ the switchboard,
when the number of incoming calls reaches 7,000 per 15 minute window. He has
also written 22 books.

His hobbies include travelling through the outback, family fun, fitness,
music, dancing a lot, and writing for 4WD magazines. His last four popular
science books have all been No. 1 popular science best sellers in Australia
(according to the New Scientist).

TOUR DATES
14- 16 November – Sydney
17 November – Brisbane
18-19 November – Melbourne