Featuring a vast and extraordinary collection of crackpots, visionaries, despots, prophets, performers, royals, politicians, inventors, philosophers, writers, artists and just plain eccentrics and their phobias, compulsions, odd beliefs and plain weird habits, including weird laws. By the same author as the Mammoth Book of Tasteless Lists! In Alaska it's illegal to wake a sleeping bear for the purposes of taking a photo!In Vermont women must obtain written permission from their husbands to wear false teeth!In California it's illegal to set a mousetrap without first obtaining a hunting permit!In Minnesota a person may not cross the state line with a duck on their head!Elvis Presley was convinced that he could turn on the Gracelands sprinkler system with his thoughts!Florence Nightingale kept a miniature pet owl in her pocket!Salvador Dali ate vast quantities of Camembert before going to bed so that his dreams would be more vivid
Karl Shaw writes humour and popular non-fiction titles including the New York Timss bestsellers Royal Babylon and 5 People Who Died During Sex. His most recent is the acclaimed historic true crime thriller The Killing of Lord George: A Tale of Murder and Deceit in Edwardian England.
The Mammoth Book of Oddballs and Eccentrics is exactly what it sounds like: an index of freaks, geeks, neurotics and crazies. It's not the easiest reference book to navigate and it probably won't come in particularly handy to anyone for any rational reason, but it's still a fun read and certainly worth taking a look at. From eccentric inventors to celebrities and their phobias to hilarious, unique deathbed confessions, this book really does shine a light on how truly weird some of the most famous people in history have been.
This book consists of mostly short little stories (mostly less than one page long) about weird behaviors of mostly famous British people. It is one of those books that doesn't have a plot, that can be read in short sittings, that doesn't have to be read from cover to cover in chronological order. The stories were mostly fun to read (although some were disturbing), but I'm not sure that tomorrow I will remember any of what I read.
This is one of those books that is an absolute jumble of quirky information- some of it accurate, some not, about all sorts of individuals- from dukes to kings (Elvis, that is) and lots of folks in between.
I found that it was well read if kept on theback of the toilet tank...
This is my favorite "bathroom book" of all time. Nearly every portrait, rarely longer than a page in length, is amusing, disturbing, baffling or all three. Great as a gift to friends, even those who aren't readers (if you have such friends).
I loved this book since I was preteen because of the unusual or weird facts and stories of various people, such as judges, criminals, presidents, writers, artist, actors, musicians, or just “ordinary” citizens. I felt this book is an example of one of those books you read that you will think on and off for your rest of your life, or a way to make yourself laugh out loud. At least for me it was both.
The Mammoth Book of Oddballs and Eccentrics by Karl Shaw (Carroll & Graf Publishers 2000) (796). This is a thick compendium of mostly British nutjobs and weirdos. There is no coherent narrative intended, so the reader may sample at leisure from the hundreds of entries contained herein. My rating: 7/10, finished 2/10/16.
HILARIOUS anecdotes of the crazies! Easily organized by person so you can read a few at a time or whole chapters. Shaw, a British author, has a wonderfully dry wit, which will make you laugh out loud.
It's been a few years since I read this, but I recall loving every page. But then I love true accounts of those who walk a...different non conforming path. I believe I still own it somewhere in this messy library. One day I should fish it out and skim through it.
It had some interesting bits but I'm afraid I gave up on it about a quarter of the way through as it failed to keep my interest through a lot of the dry passages about historical peers that I could not relate to. There are some gems in there if the extracts on the back cover are anything to go by.
It was good, but contains a lot of information from his other books and is simply, not as riveting. It was also hard to find. I had to special order it from Amazon...
Too much unverifiable information, about a myriad of unknown people -- and the few I DID know about were described inaccurately. Not much faith in this book at all.