Williams & Kapila state: "the literature abounds with reports of morbidity and even death as a result of circumcision."
The world's literature has always abounded with great survivors.
Early Christian popular ascetic literature abounds with stories of women who reject the fiancés imposed on them by their families, and even reject their husbands.
Greek literature abounds with scenes of slaves being flogged; it was a means of forcing them to work, as were control of rations, clothing, and rest.
But megadose therapy isn't something to play around with or undertake on the advice of faddists; the medical literature abounds in cautionary tales.
The recent literature of the Anglicans abounds in the evidence of this trouble.
In the meantime, it suffices to point out that contemporary literature abounded in criticism of wealth, the commonplace being that gold dictates everything.
The literature abounds with incorrect theories and information: in general, anything published before 1952 is suspect.
Despite the compelling evidence of statins' therapeutic benefits, the literature abounds with documentation of wide treatment gaps in clinical practice [5-10].
The art, literature, and even architecture of the time abounded with images and accounts of gods and heroes, and expressed a generally understood symbology.