Nonfiction Works Chapters

Many of the world's greatest books are non-fiction works. This Collection will help you to explore both famous and not-so-famous titles.

What was once so familiar - even one's home - becomes unfamiliar to a person suffering from Lewy Body Dementia.

Is it possible that wearing a key around one's neck will help to unlock memories hidden by a brain illness?

James feels he has "divine rights" and authorizes a new English translation of the Bible, then dies leaving the throne to his son.

Even though he is only human, King James leaves a legacy with his King James Version of the Bible.

When Lewy Bodies implant themselves in a human brain it's like beetles that begin to infest a maple tree. Soon nature takes a different course.

People who have dementia sometimes see things that are not real (but what they see is real to them).

James grows up without his mother, taking the throne at the age of one.

Samuel Clemens, writing as Mark Twain, creates a character called Huckleberry Finn. Huck is based on a real person called Tom Blankenship.

As a person with dementia tries to convey her thoughts, things don't come out the way she intends. To her, it seems as though the thoughts are trapped...

Even after he was arrested in New York City, during 1935, Victor Lustig was not-yet finished with his lifetime as a con man.

By the time people knew Robert Miller as Count Victor Lustig, the con man was a master at deceiving people with his money-box schemes.

Forced to flee France, because he "sold" the Eiffel Tower to unsuspecting Parisian scrap-metal dealers, Victor Lustig returns to Prohibition-Era Ameri...

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