Paul Harvey is the most listened-to radio personality in America. Millions of loyal listeners tune in every week to hear his unique blend of news and views. Now, in Paul Harvey's The Rest Of The Story you'll find eighty-two astonishing true stories of the famous and infamous, the outrageous and the unknown. Each unforgettable tale has for its startling punch line the wild and wonderful solution to a real-life mystery. The 1950's presidential candidate who killed a teenage girl. The governor of New York who dressed up like a woman--at taxpayer's expense. The queen whose secret photo collection--if exposed--would shock the world. The American founding father who kept his wife locked in the cellar. The best-selling mystery writer who tried to get away . . . with murder! From present-day shockers to historical puzzlers, Paul Harvey's The Rest Of The Story reveals the untold story behind some of history's strangest little-known facts.
I read this book which was given to me nearly or more than 20 years ago. My father used to love listening to Paul Harvey's radio program "The Rest of the Story" so I was familiar with the format of this book.
This book is a collection of 80 stories about mostly famous people and short snippets of their history or more or other history that isn't the prominent history of the subject, like Marilyn Monroe or Sarah Winchester, or "Doc" Holliday to cite some examples.
The stories are interesting and I can recommend this book.
You can find it at the Canopy by Hilton Reykjavik City Center where I am leaving it behind for someone else to read.
I loved reading Paul Harvey's the Rest of the story. It was a challenge trying to solve the mystery of the person he was writing about as the clues built in many of the stories. The book has been given a Young Adult/Adult interest level. Many of the people that Harvey describes are unknown to the younger generation which would make it of more interest to adults. Other stories would be ideal for a junior high or high school audience because they are so inspirational. We are always seeking for ways to motivate our students. I will recommend this book to family, friends, and students.
This is a fun book! I used to listen to Paul Harvey on the radio as I got ready for school in the mornings, and it was fun to read a bunch of his stories in short doses in this book. I always wonder if they're all true...? Regardless, a lot of them give me goosebumps when I find out "the rest of the story," so it's a lot of fun.
A collection of Paul Harvey's radio spots of the same name. I could hear that distinctive voice of his reading it to.me as I went along. If you like the odd little corners of history, this is going to be a great book for you.
If Paul Harvey was still alive today, the only way he would be able to make a living with his eccentric creepy voice would be to peddle true-crime sleaze like that white-haired pervert on NBC. Whatisname. The Dateline guy.
This was a book from my youth. Nationally syndicated radio "news and comment" guy, Paul Harvey, was a voice from the lazy days of the 1970s, mainly heard in the summer months from a static-prone but strong little transistor radio, when I was off school and frolicking around the pool or the yard, playing with the dogs or climbing the clothesline pole or retrieving an errant football quickly to avoid a vicious dog on the other side of the neighbor's fence.
So Paul Harvey represents a more innocent time, for me and for the country. He had an easy, slightly sinister and bemused edge to his vocal delivery that added suspense to his editorialized news broadcasts, and to a special segment of programs he titled, The Rest of the Story, which were neat little tales, often about famous people from history, that always had a boffo punchline that was supposed to be surprising and unpredictable.
This book was a collection of those little tales; kind of like the instant gratification stories one might have encountered in any typical Reader's Digest.
Needless to say, I read this a LONG time ago, and for some reason only just remembered it today; something to add to my life reading list.
Paul's son, Paul Harvey Jr., continued this radio shtick, fairly effectively, since he closely mimicked the vocal style of his dad, but by then I was too put off by the right-wing slant of the family broadcasting dynasty to care.
In the days before the Reagan years, this bias did not register with a kid who was just looking for some neat tales.
There are all sorts of interesting tidbits that you can learn in this book - so long as you're willing to accept them at face value, without reference. Some seemed more exaggerated and unlikely than others. Sometimes, his storytelling technique will leave you feeling a bit jerked around, and his efforts to maintain the surprise sometimes interfere with the story itself. Other stories are obvious, despite the attempts to keep the ending a secret. However, for a quick, effortless (read: on the toilet) type book, it comes highly recommended.
Borrowed this from a friend and enjoyed the quick read. Each little story is only a page or two long so it's great if you only have a few minutes at a time to read. All sorts of interesting tidbits that make you say "no way!" and a neat little twist at the end. But that of course... is the rest of the story...
Brought back so many memories!!! Really miss this guy. Wonderful, amazing stories right from his radio show. So glad his son decided to collect and publish. Definitely recommend for short entertaining yet educational facts! haha Could be an early version of Snopes! But much, much better. Share with your kids on 'how it used to be'!!! Before all this stupid nonsense of influencers, glorified criminals, and egotists!
I grew up listening to Paul Harvey on the radio in my family's kitchen at lunch time. It was a ritual with us. Often we'd try to guess when he went to commercial break with his famous "the rest of the story" who Paul would be talking about. Sometimes we were right, sometimes we weren't. Bu it always made for fond memories around the kitchen table.
We now have a generation that knows little of Paul Harvey or his historical nuggets known as the "Rest of the Story." This book is a gem as we learn little-known facts of people in history, music, and sports. Wow seems to sum up what I feel but yet, it seems so inadequate. It's an easy read that is ends much too soon.
Love that this is short & each "chapter" is just a few pages. However because this was written in the 70s, I didn't get most of it. For every 1 I got & went "huh" to, there were 5 stories that were written about someone I had no idea was. Still a cool read considering it was the book that launched his eventual Rest of the Story program.
I remember hearing The Rest of the Story on the radio as a child in the 70s. The vignettes were like mini-mysteries and held my attention all the way to the end every time. Reading them, I felt I was being let in on a secret, and I kept marveling, "how could he find so many interesting lives to keep the series going week in and week out!"
This a big collection of Paul Harvey's "The Rest of the Story" radio show transcripts. If you love the show, you will love the book. The two biggest challenges are not to hear Harvey's voice while you read and not to skip to the end of the story to see who it is!
If you like to know all the details, this book is a fun way to learn a little bit more about stories that we thought we knew. This is also a great book if you remember listening to Paul Harvey's Rest of the Story segments on the radio.
This was a delightful compendium of historical tidbits, full of intrigue and surprise. I couldn't help but hear Paul Harvey's iconic voice in my head as I read them. For a fun read, I highly recommend it.
I loved listening to Paul Harvey's The Rest of the Story on the radio as a youth and this brought back memories although they are way earlier stories than what I listened to.