1. Bridget Fonda's Godfather is Larry Hagman 2. T.S. Eliot, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, & Thomas Hardy married their secretaries. 3. Right before being executed by electric chair, James French said to a newspaper reporter, "I have a terrific headline for you in the morning, 'French Fries.'" 4. The Scarlet Pimpernel was banned by the Nazis, not because it's language or theme, but because Orczy was Jewish. 5. Sonny Bono, Elvis Presley, & Ken Kesey would have turned 70 in 2005. 6. The human sneeze travels at 600 miles per hour. 7. Banging your head against the wall burns 150 calories an hour.
I enjoy trivia. I find a lot of the pop culture stuff in here fairly boring, especially the ones that are formatted like "People who [have a pilot's license/were adopted/were married 8 times]" and then just a long list of names. I actually read the second book first (oops. I've had these books lying around forever and have read them before, so it's not a big deal. Also it's not as though there's any sort of continuity to worry about), and it improves on this aspect.
I found this to be one of the stupidest but funniest books I've ever read. It will fill you brain with stuff you really don't need, but it is great to know it for some reason.
A compendium of This Book and That Book, it offers exactly what the title suggests. Lists of this and that, a joke or two thrown in here and there, random odd facts about history, science and "The Human Condition." Some random topics: "What they did before becoming famous." "Dumb things people have said," "Engagements that didn't lead to marriage," "Famous people with famous ancestors," "People who were bullied at school," "Born on the same day," "Suffered from asthma", "Had epilepsy," "Avid skiers." These are all famous people, historical personages, celebrities, names most people sort of know. None of this will stay in my head, but it was fun. Read as bedtime reading, for which it was perfect. Pleasant, oddball stuff, easy to skim through, an amusing oddity here and there. I will remember mostly that it was written by a Brit, and so many of the "famous" celebrities that he cites are names that are pretty relatively unknown on this side of the pond. I will look some up, just for the hell of it, at some point.
I've read much better books of factoids and lists (the Uncle John's Bathroom Readers are far superior). I give it 1.5 stars. There were a couple amusing bits that kept it from being a 1.
Loads of really great, funny, interesting and, best of all, completely random facts and list! The only down side is the fact that is rather out dated now, but of course that's not Symons' fault.:) All in all, a must read for fact-hoarders!