Eccentrically compiled, irresponsibly written and insanely edited, "Shite's Unoriginal Miscellany" blends humor and knowledge together in a superior recipe for instant laughter! This essential handbook is far from being just another collection of useless information. It is in fact a collection of use-less, misleading, and possibly dangerous information. Among a wealth of esoteric, vital or merely fascinating information- 'semaphore signals', 'flowerpot sizes', 'popular assault rifles', 'devices for jogging the memory' and 'ways of escaping from wild animals (probably)' spring to mind immediately- it offers such priceless snippets of information as 'things not to say to your mother on her birthday', 'Elvis sightings', 'carrying a large flat parcel' and, of course, 'things to do with mashed potatoes'. Here too is information that will come in useful when you least expect it, from 'contemporary operas' to 'Buffyisms', and 'safety gloves' to 'fashionable diseases and ailments'.
Not quite what I was expecting. It's a mix of parody lists (a la Schott's Original Miscellany) and real facts, albeit silly ones with no importance. For example there's a list called "Famous People Whose Names Begin with 'H' and Who Are Only Known By Their First Name" or "How to Fold a Cat". Rather amusing, I was pleasantly surprised.
Kept its promise. Shite. Unoriginal. Not a parody. 1 quid badly spent. If it wasn't for the YMCA, I'd take it back. Thank god it was Ved Buens Ende on the speakers.
Totally random, useless information that is at times informative and at other times hilarious, included are such topics as how to escape a wild animal, video plus codes for the year 2003, cooking terminology, office jargon, mistakes made by crooks, famous people. Some of the information is just downright crazy and ridiculous but at the same time fascinating. Puts me in mind of a less serious version of the New scientist series of books. Great for reading from beginning to end or in the case of some casual readers just for flipping through. Overall a lot of fun.
This collection of random "facts" appears to be a weird combination of amusing-but-true and all-out-farcical. Unfortunately, I often wasn't sure which was which, and this made things much less funny than they could have been. Mildly entertaining at times but not worth reading cover to cover.
A hilarious little book to pick up and flick through for a giggle. Boasts sections such as 'Ten things to do with mashed potato' (make a scale model of Notre dame cathedral) 'Interesting laws' (in Italy, women named Mary may not work as prostitutes) and 'Mafia nicknames'.
The name of the book and the author says it all. You know how people say "You can write random stuff and make it into a book"? Well, this is that book. Nothing but random stuff. If you need to kill time by reading without caring what it is, this is your kind of book.