The Book of Predictions
http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Book_of_Predictions an entity of type: Thing
The Book of Predictions was a book published in 1981 and written by David Wallechinsky, Amy Wallace, and Irving Wallace, the authors of The Book of Lists. Written in the same type of style (i.e., lists), it includes lists of predictions by scientists, science fiction authors, politicians, and others. Other contents include:
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
The Book of Predictions
rdf:langString
The Book of Predictions
rdf:langString
The Book of Predictions
xsd:string
William Morrow & Company
xsd:integer
1965431
xsd:integer
1064585149
rdf:langString
Cover
rdf:langString
First edition
xsd:double
303.4
rdf:langString
United States
xsd:integer
0
rdf:langString
English
xsd:integer
452
xsd:integer
1981
rdf:langString
The Book of Predictions was a book published in 1981 and written by David Wallechinsky, Amy Wallace, and Irving Wallace, the authors of The Book of Lists. Written in the same type of style (i.e., lists), it includes lists of predictions by scientists, science fiction authors, politicians, and others. Other contents include:
* "18 Greatest Predictors of All Time" including the Great Pyramid of Cheops, Mother Shipton, Nostradamus, and Edgar Cayce.
* "The 6 Greatest Predictions of All Time": The Ides of March, St. Malachy's predictions of future popes, a prediction of the Titanic's sinking, and Jeane Dixon's prediction of the Assassination of John F. Kennedy.
* "The Worst Predictions of All Time", ranging from "legitimate" failures (the British Parliament stating the incandescent light would never work) to psychic fails (Muhammad Ali would be elected to Congress in a non-election year).
* The Book of Predictions Contest. The winners receive a housekeeping robot (if available) or personal appointments with famous psychics. Winners were chosen in 1982.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
2989
xsd:string
0-688-00024-X
xsd:string
303.4
xsd:positiveInteger
452