I received this book as a gift from family. Evidently, my mention of going to read some history books on Canada resulted in this book being given to me.
I don't know if this is meant to be a humor book or not. If the answer is yes, then this book would receive an even lower rating. I know humor is subjective but, as I have mentioned in the past, timing matters when it comes to laughs. Usually you have to make the jokes quick and move on, especially in written form. If you try to put humor into an over-arcing storyline then the story has to be very fast paced, ridiculous and not dwell on technical matters. This book reads more like a travelogue or a personal blog.
The book is good at laying out odd facts in a concise manner and each entry is really only a few paragraphs at most. However, going back to the personal blog comment, the author constantly injects information about their personal life and background. I don't think this is a negative entirely because it gave some context occasionally but, I found it annoying to keep hearing about their living arrangements or their thoughts on politics.
So now you have a book that is not about humor, not about particularly interesting facts but social commentary. I am not sure if the term is dated now but "social justice warrior" came to my mind when having to listen to social commentary in a book that I guess is meant to be a introductory history lesson on culture.
I don't know who I would recommend this book to except maybe people who are already familiar with any other content this author has made or some one who wants really low-stakes info about culture in Canada.