...step right up and enter the world of useless information, pointless trivia, and off-the-wall facts. Some of the facts are funny. Some are surprising. And some are just plain weird. But all of them are trueand irresistibly fascinating!
You'll find information on virtually every subject under the sun, including:
Philosophy: On February 8, 2000, the meaning of life was auctioned on eBay. The winning bid was $3.26.
Popular Culture: Charlie Chaplin once lost a Charlie Chaplin look-alike contest.
Science: Dolly the sheepthe first cloned mammalwas named after country singer Dolly Parton.
Sex: The largest human cell is the female ovum. The smallest is the male sperm.
Sports: The average lifespan of an NHL hockey puck is 7 minutes.
Statistics: On average, women utter 7,000 words a day while men manage just over 2,000.
Great counterbalance for a really deep and hard to understand book - a fun break to take! Sometimes you just want to get away from the 'heavy' reading for a change of pace. Anyone thinking of going on Jeopardy might want to consider adding this book to their list; you will find lots of different topics covered here!
Nice quick read for the loo or, in my case, waiting for your ramen to cook and cool down. My favorites were:
"You can tell the temperature by listening to a cricket chirp. For the temperature in degrees Fahrenheit, count the number of chirps in 15 seconds and then add 37."
"In the late 1600's Puritan society, a child over 16 convicted of cursing a parent was sentenced to death. Being a stubborn or rebellious child also earned you a death sentence."
"Since the establishment by Congress in 1913, the Federal Reserve has overseen a 98 percent drop in the value of the U.S. dollar. In other words, today's dollar would have been worth 2 cents in 1913. Before the Fed's establisment, the purchasing power of the dollar remained constant over a century."
A good quick read. Full of facts that will come up in everyday conversation. Not boring at all and very quick paced, large print on small pages. Worth the time, though at first glance it may not seem like it.
This fun little book is full of short interesting facts from a variety of areas. It's easy to read in well under an hour. My only complaint is that I wish there was an appendix with references for where they found their facts.
I enjoyed the heck out of this book and yet I was left unsatisfied. For one thing, this book claims to be a 'collection of utterly useless information'. However, I felt that there was some really interesting stuff inside that could be useful for a game of Trivial Pursuit or Jeopardy!.
Then there's the length of the book. 192 pages. However, most pages have only one factoid. Some might have two, tops. Either more facts could have been inserted into this book OR they could have reduced the page count by, oh maybe a third. No wonder we're having a shortage on trees!
Some generic illustrations are added throughout the book. Public domain stuff from the late 1800s and such. They're extraneous. Again, instead of these fillers, either put in more facts or take out some pages!
When this hardcover book debuted in 2006, the MSRP was $21.99! Had I paid that much for this book based on all the faults I have for it now, I would have been pissed! Currently, this book sells new on Amazon for $9.99. That's a 55% discount and still too rich for my blood.
Thankfully, I got this at a used book store 'fill a bag' sale. I think the bag cost $20 or $25. We filled that sucker to the brim and then some. I'd say I ended up spending less than $0.75 for this book. Maybe a bit less. That sort of bargain prevents me from rating this book lower. But I wonder if I should for those of you who might not benefit from a massive fire sale.
I liked what I read. I just do not feel like there's a portrait of Andrew Jackson's worth of knowledge inside.
A collection of utterly useless information Almost a booklet: 207 pages. a little known fact on each, a perfect bathroom read. My favorites: Like snowflakes or fingerprints, the bacterial profile in your belly button is unique.
Cleve is a Contronym: a word with its own antonym. It can only be derived from context: It can mean ‘to cling or adhere to’ or to split or sever something.
A breezy, fun read. Fact extensive without being fact intensive. Here’s my favorite one of the bunch:
Ice-skaters skate on water, not ice. At 32° Fahrenheit, ice has a liquid surface measuring 1.5 millionths of an inch. Below –31° Fahrenheit, the liquid layer becomes so thin that a skater’s blades would stick rather than glide across the ice.
Clever little book! I found this at an Airbnb in Charleston. When I got home, I ordered one for every guy friend I have named Jack! It is filled with cutisms!
A well written fact book, that teaches you everything from the origin to the saying “I laughed all the way to the bank” to the fact that the Bible is the most shoplifted book in the world.
It’s fine, worth the $6.00 I’ve seen it go for at Barnes & Noble
An adorable little book! I used it to make a "daily fact" board and it was so easy to pick interesting, funny, or unusual facts from that I had never heard before. I also is filled with cute vintage illustrations that make the book well-designed and aesthetically pleasing. Would recommend!