Monday, July 12, 2021

Episode #92: The Book That You've Read Is Always Your Friend


This seems to be a reasonable facsimile representation of what the past month has felt like with me and my computer. 'Nuff said, eh?

Anywho, I finally got inspired to write a blog post this week, and the inspiration, if you can believe it, came from FacePalmBook.

I know, weird, right?

A good FB friend of mine posted a pic/factoid about good old G.W (18th century, not 21st century), who apparently through a retirement party for a general staff member and it listed a total of about 100+ bottles of various intoxicating liquors that shared amongst the 54 invitees.

I happen to mention how a book I had received for my b'day back when I was in the 30-39 age range explained how he almost bankrupted the young nation by insisting that he only needed an expense account and not a salary.

The name of this wonderful tome was called George Washington's Expense Account, and it was about one the quirkiest book I've ever enjoyed reading.

So this got me to thinking about all of the quirky books that I've read throughout the years. I've always been a hardcore fan of the non-fiction genre (non-literary), and while I have branched out to other genres, this one has always been my go-to whenever I can't find something good to read.

My definition of quirky is probably extremely different than your definition, simply because it encompasses all of the sub-genres of non-fiction. So the type of stuff I've read is quite unusual/quirky to say the least.

My quirky reading started with The Book of Lists (only title that I've actually remembered) as a kid, and it quickly swerved into bad tabloid reading (courtesy of my grandmother). As I got older, it swerved back into lots of biographies (e.g. Van Johnson), lots of memoirs (e.g. a multitude of musicians/music groups) weird encyclopedias that delved into all kinds of topics (e.g. musicians who passed away, various sports leagues).

Then the swerve went to true crime, of which we've made our home base for the past 30+ years. Lots of quirky stuff there. Lately though, it's been whatever happens to catch my fancy at a given moment of the hour while I'm at the library (pre-Covid days. Haven't been to one since January 2020), so I'll drift from one given century to another given century, depending on what the topic happens to be (e.g. the last book I read prior to the pandemic was about The Crusades)

I've had mostly hits while perusing random non-fiction topics (e.g. law enforcement, true crime) but I've had some memorable near misses (e.g., a book about the bands Fish and Insane Clown Posse which turned into a journey about the writer being diagnosed with bi-polar, a book about capitol punishment in England circa 17th and 18th century), but overall, I've been happy with my quirky selections.

How 'bout you? Have you read some quirky books over the years that tickled your fancy? Do you read quirky books as break from your normal reading material?

{c} 2021 by G.B. Miller. All Rights Reserved

6 comments:

  1. I don't read a lot of non-fiction, although I saw one on Fox news about Marxism in American I might pick up. Although I'm sure it will be scarier than just quirky.

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    1. Non-fiction has always been my bread and butter, so I've found some really interesting titles of the years.

      That does sound more scarier than quirky.

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  2. Probably the quirkiest book I ever read was that one about 101 uses for a dead rabbit. It had its moments, though.

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    1. That definitely wins the award for most quirkiest. I had one on sarcasm A-Z which was pretty funny and quirky.

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  3. I'm always on the lookout for quirky nonfic, but I'm not a fan of true crime. So My recent quirky read was "Made You Look: How Advertising Works and Why You Should Know". It was in the kids section (that's my realm after all), but I enjoyed it.

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    1. That definitely wins the award for quirkiness. Thanks for stopping by.

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Lay it on me, because unlike others, I can handle it.