This is a superb compendium of bizarre-but-true episodes from American history, ranging from a short-lived health craze for drinking the blood of animals at slaughterhouses to an 11-year-old stigmatic at a black Baptist church in 1970s Oakland.
What places it above similar books is the author's crisp, arch prose, and his unwillingness to simply stop at presenting the details of bizarre events without interpretation. A chapter that starts off by describing a supposed Sasquatch encounter in the 1920s, for example, veers off into a fascinating exploration of the history of magical treasure hunts in the U.S. (a history that includes, among others, Mormonism founder Joseph Smith), while the rash of "phantom clown" reports in the early 1980s serves as a jumping-off point for a discussion about slavery, the medical industry's dicey history with African-Americans, and Chicago-area serial killers.
Always surprising and entertaining, this book will appeal to the specialist in the bizarre as well as anyone interested in learning more about the forgotten corners of U.S. history.