“So Now You Know…A Compendium of Completely Useless Information” is a nonfiction book providing numerous interesting facts on various topics including history, religion, food, science, and art.
As I finished this book, I was happy by how fast time went by while reading. This book was a very amusing, informative and entertaining. This book would be a great gift for those who love learning something new as well as saved for future use at a game night or trivia night event. In closing, my only annoyance with the book is that I feel it could have been greatly improved by the use of section dividers as a way to group like topics together.
so i already knew much of what was offered by this book (a parliament of owls; flamingos aren't naturally pink; coca-cola invented santa claus, hitler was once man of the year) but i really loved what i learned (where the phrase "sleep tight" comes from; the fact that george washington rejected a movement to make him king, saying "i didn't fight george III to become george I"; oranges are technically berries).
Most facts that are not well known like most Youtube Videos that basically repeat the same "little-known" facts. Each fact takes up a page and topics are kept together and change is topic is seamless. Quick and Interesting read. You get a whole picture if you read Little-Known Facts About Well-Known Stuff by: David Hoffman it like both halves make up the whole picture.
This book is a collection of unusual facts that can serve as entertainment or as serious starting points for intelligent conversations. One of my favorites is on page 2, “The Bible is available in nearly 2,500 languages, including Klingon, Vulcan and Romulan, three languages created for the ‘Star Trek’ series.” A great rejoinder if you are being preached to by someone practicing their holier-than-thou credentials. When they ask if you have read the Bible, you have the potential to respond that you have read it in Vulcan. There are no uninteresting facts in this book, all are short and to the point, some are less than 15 words long. If you need a set of brief and entertaining facts, this is a place to go. It reads quick and the facts are disjoint, meaning it is also an excellent book for bathroom reading.
Just what the title says, useless information. I love books like this. A few things I new but majority of the book I never heard. The one that stays with me is "Jack Nicholson appeared on the The Andy Griffith Show twice, in 1966 and 1967." Just wow, I did not know that, now I am going to have to find those episodes. This would be a great gift for that person who loves to test you, you know that type. They start with "Did you know...." Quick read that educates.
A friend loaned me this book. I love random facts and such so I thought I'd really love this book, but the facts were a little too random for me. They'd get interesting and then the next fact would completely change the topic. The facts were interesting, though, and delivered in a succinct way that would make them easy to remember. The book reminded me of a fact calendar where you get a fact a day because that is how they were worded. Anyway, I would recommended it to anyone who likes random facts that you'll never be able to use other than for a random bit of knowledge, or maybe a trivia game. It's a fast read and at least a few of them were interesting.
"The modern image of Santa Claus as a rosy-cheeked old man wearing a plush red suit was popularized by American artist Haddon Sundblom in advertisements for the Coca-Cola Company in the 1930s. Coca-Cola hit upon this advertising campaign as a way to boost slumping sales during the winter months of the Great Depression." This is one of my favorite bits of "useless information" in this book. I don't believe that kind of information is so very useless.
I read this book in an hour and half. It was fun and short although a couple of the facts are a little outdated and maybe even a little misleading but for the most part it was a fun super easy quick read.
this book was really amusing. It was fun to see what I already knew and even cooler to find out new fun useless facts. you can never know too many useless fact!
I read this book in about an hour...a good little time waster that will fill your brain with random bits of trivia that are bound to come in handy if you ever audition to be on "Jeopardy"
It was funny. And it has some really useless, but interesting information. There was a lot that I already knew, but there was some that I hadn't known at all.