Trivia Books
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Trivia Books sorted by
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Baseball's Book of Firsts
Published in Hardcover by Running Press Book Publishers (1999-03)
List price: $19.98
New price: $1.95
Used price: $0.04
Collectible price: $19.98
Used price: $0.04
Collectible price: $19.98
Average review score: 

For baseball fans only
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-09
Review Date: 2006-05-09
A must for all baseball fans!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
Review Date: 2000-06-25
Think you know everthing there is to know about baseball? You'll be surprised by the factoids uncovered. A must have reference guide for all baseball enthusists.

Best of Baby Boomer Trivia
Published in Paperback by Vantage Pr (2000-10)
List price: $10.95
New price: $150.10
Used price: $15.00
Used price: $15.00
Average review score: 

Advance praise for this trivia book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-09
Review Date: 2000-07-09
This book lets the BABY BOOMER test their knowledge on Baby Boomer trivia without having to log onto baby boomer sites. The book is small enough to take to the beach, long trips etc. It can easily fit in any tote bage. Every phase of the baby boomer era is covered. The People, the Advent of Television, Everyday life, the Famous People of that era. Entertainment and a final chapter of Potpourri that has a little be of everything. It is the ultimate book on Baby Boomer Era
Great for parties or for simple entertainment
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-01
Review Date: 2001-02-01
The Best Of Baby Boomer Trivia is a wonderfully entertaining compendium of trivia questions focusing on the "baby boom" generation and range from the exceedingly easy to the exceptionally tough. Hundreds of trivia questions cover every aspect of the boomer years, personalities, events, and activities that will test the memory. Great for parties or for simple self-entertainment for a rainy day, Best Of Baby Boomer Trivia is very highly recommended.

The Best Trivia Book of History!!!
Published in Paperback by BookSurge Publishing (2007-11-15)
List price: $11.99
New price: $11.99
Used price: $66.47
Used price: $66.47
Average review score: 

BEST TRIVIA BOOK
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
Review Date: 2008-02-14
This is a great trivia book for all ages. You will learn a lot, and have fun too.
"The Best Trivia Book of History!!!" - 5 STARS - New for 2008
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-30
Review Date: 2007-11-30
Best trivia book for 2008! Trivia questions and answers on American History and World History - always entertaining trivia writer, "Queen of Trivia" makes learning fun . . . Great for kids and adults alike. Highly recommend this fun, entertaining and educational trivia book for anyone with a desire to learn more about our world.
CAN YOU BELIEVE YOUR EYES? OVER 250 ILLUSIONS AND OTHER VISUAL ODDITIES.
Published in Paperback by Robson (1992)
List price:
Used price: $3.20
Average review score: 

GREAT FUN & yet very educational...understanding how the brain really works!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-15
Review Date: 2006-03-15
This is the first classic book on visual illusions by J Richard Block, the author, who also wrote a second book entitled 'Seeing Double'. Both are printed in large format. In fact, there is also a card deck which amplifies the earlier book.
Both books discussed the phenomena of human perception through hundreds of perplexing visual illusions & mind-bending eye tricks gathered from around the world.
The entire collection in the two books is definitely amazing and unique in some way.
The best learning experiences I got out of these two wonderful books are a greater understanding - & appreciation - of how the brain really works. I often use many of the visual illusions to demonstrate the principal operating principles of the brain, particularly the salient aspects of selective recognition and patterning. I have also found that some of them have been very useful in demonstrating cognitive traps & pattern interrupts, especially in the context of personal creativity.
Although the visual illusions are fun to play with, I find them very educational, just as what I have elaborated.
There is another type of visual illusions, known as random dot stereograms (some people call them 3D visual illusions), which are more fun but somewhat harder to play with. Nevertheless, they are also very educational, especially in understanding - & appreciating - how the brain really works!
Both books discussed the phenomena of human perception through hundreds of perplexing visual illusions & mind-bending eye tricks gathered from around the world.
The entire collection in the two books is definitely amazing and unique in some way.
The best learning experiences I got out of these two wonderful books are a greater understanding - & appreciation - of how the brain really works. I often use many of the visual illusions to demonstrate the principal operating principles of the brain, particularly the salient aspects of selective recognition and patterning. I have also found that some of them have been very useful in demonstrating cognitive traps & pattern interrupts, especially in the context of personal creativity.
Although the visual illusions are fun to play with, I find them very educational, just as what I have elaborated.
There is another type of visual illusions, known as random dot stereograms (some people call them 3D visual illusions), which are more fun but somewhat harder to play with. Nevertheless, they are also very educational, especially in understanding - & appreciating - how the brain really works!
A great book! It's fun to see different people figure it out
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-02
Review Date: 1999-04-02
A great book!!!!Watch others try to figure out the puzzles

Carnal Knowledge: A Navel Gazer's Dictionary of Anatomy, Etymology, and Trivia
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (2006-11-28)
List price: $24.95
Average review score: 

book readings of Carnal Knowledge
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-18
Review Date: 2007-10-18
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R17GN5EJSN8ZZE A series of clips from Charles Hodgson's readings of his book Carnal Knowledge: A Navel Gazer's Dictionary of Anatomy, Etymology, and Trivia
Don't Judge A Book By It's Cover
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
Review Date: 2007-09-03
Great fun and interesting information BUT the pictures on the cover (implying it's just a mundane sexual romp) stop me from giving it to my Grandkids and others who would love the content.

The Cook's Companion (A Think Book)
Published in Hardcover by Anova Books (2004-08-01)
List price: $15.00
New price: $9.26
Used price: $1.49
Used price: $1.49
Average review score: 

a great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-29
Review Date: 2005-04-29
this book kept me hooked for hours at a time. It has to be the most interesting book i have ever read. What makes it great is it keeps your attention and your are also learning useful knowledge.
Thought for food
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
Review Date: 2007-10-25
This is a delightful pot porri of all things edible. It is the sort of book you can keep dipping into learing new facts on food and its history. There are quotes, cartoons and recipes. If you are compiling quizzes you will find lots here to test the best of minds and memories. Be warned. It will provoke the appetite.

Dick Van Patten's Totally Terrific TV Trivia: Put Your Knowledge of TV Legend, Fact & Myth to the Test (Buzztime Trivia Series) (Buzztime Trivia)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Square One Publishers (2007-03-15)
List price: $7.95
New price: $3.98
Used price: $1.90
Used price: $1.90
Average review score: 

My parents were wrong, wrong, wrong
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-07
Review Date: 2007-08-07
Back when I was a youngster living at home, I constantly heard the parental refrain... "You watch too darned much television! Turn off that set!"
After reading Dick Van Patten's buzztime TV trivia title, it's obvious that mom and dad were wrong, wrong, wrong. I always fancied myself quite the trivia expert, and television/pop culture was one of my specialities. Mr. Van Patten has clearly outed me as a fraud. I rarely could rack up better than 70% on the hundreds of 10-question "games". It shakes me to my baby boomer foundation to learn that I'm not "master of my domain".
Totally Terrific also surprised me in two ways. First, there were areas in which I knew more than I thought. Amazingly, I kept getting lots and lots of Milton Berle-Texaco Theatre-Your Show of Shows era questions correct. And then, there were other areas in which I considered myself intelligentia supremo, only to fall flat on my over-confident face. For example, I missed question after question in the Seinfeld category, "not that it matters". I would have thought that seeing every single issue of "the show about nothing" at least two dozen times would have earned me a few 100% scores. Mr. Van Patten's questions literally gave me "the Jimmy legs".
OK seriously, this is another fun entry in the buzztime trivia series. I loved the Micky Dolenz rock and roll title from last year. I'm rating this five stars based on expectation and delivery. I realize that Totally Terrific TV Trivia isn't Hamlet. But, it's great fun to zip through a game or two when you have a moment. I'd also suggest this title for airplane entertainment, etc.
After reading Dick Van Patten's buzztime TV trivia title, it's obvious that mom and dad were wrong, wrong, wrong. I always fancied myself quite the trivia expert, and television/pop culture was one of my specialities. Mr. Van Patten has clearly outed me as a fraud. I rarely could rack up better than 70% on the hundreds of 10-question "games". It shakes me to my baby boomer foundation to learn that I'm not "master of my domain".
Totally Terrific also surprised me in two ways. First, there were areas in which I knew more than I thought. Amazingly, I kept getting lots and lots of Milton Berle-Texaco Theatre-Your Show of Shows era questions correct. And then, there were other areas in which I considered myself intelligentia supremo, only to fall flat on my over-confident face. For example, I missed question after question in the Seinfeld category, "not that it matters". I would have thought that seeing every single issue of "the show about nothing" at least two dozen times would have earned me a few 100% scores. Mr. Van Patten's questions literally gave me "the Jimmy legs".
OK seriously, this is another fun entry in the buzztime trivia series. I loved the Micky Dolenz rock and roll title from last year. I'm rating this five stars based on expectation and delivery. I realize that Totally Terrific TV Trivia isn't Hamlet. But, it's great fun to zip through a game or two when you have a moment. I'd also suggest this title for airplane entertainment, etc.
You don't know Dick if you don't have this book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-12
Review Date: 2007-06-12
This newest book in the ongoing "Buzztime Trivia" series jams over 900 great questions into one little (and affordable) book. There are all kinds of questions about TV shows from the late '40s to just this past season. And who better than Dick Van Patten to guide the reader along: in addition to his best-known role as father Tom Bradford on ABC's EIGHT IS ENOUGH, this sweet-faced TV legend has been all over episodic television in one way or another for nearly 50 years!
In addition to the sheer volume of information contained in such a teeny little book, my favorite thing was all the weird little factoids that come jumping out at you when you least expect it. I had forgotten, for example, that Commissioner Gordon was Batgirl's father on the BATMAN TV show. And I knew that Ricardo Montalban played a villain named Khan on STAR TREK, but I only just learned from this book that Khan's full name was revealed in the episode to be Khan Noonien Singh. This book also reports that Tiger Woods' first appearance on TV was on "The Mike Douglas Show" when he was only 2 years old, showing off his perfect golf swing to none other than the late, great Bob Hope. Cool!
If you've been alive during the past 50 years and were only paying attention to TV every other week, this book will amuse and entertain you. Imagine how much you'll like it if you've really been watching lots of TV?! Highly recommended.
In addition to the sheer volume of information contained in such a teeny little book, my favorite thing was all the weird little factoids that come jumping out at you when you least expect it. I had forgotten, for example, that Commissioner Gordon was Batgirl's father on the BATMAN TV show. And I knew that Ricardo Montalban played a villain named Khan on STAR TREK, but I only just learned from this book that Khan's full name was revealed in the episode to be Khan Noonien Singh. This book also reports that Tiger Woods' first appearance on TV was on "The Mike Douglas Show" when he was only 2 years old, showing off his perfect golf swing to none other than the late, great Bob Hope. Cool!
If you've been alive during the past 50 years and were only paying attention to TV every other week, this book will amuse and entertain you. Imagine how much you'll like it if you've really been watching lots of TV?! Highly recommended.

A Dictionary Of International Units: Metric-Matters: Names and Symbols
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2005-11-30)
List price: $12.95
New price: $8.09
Used price: $7.75
Used price: $7.75
Average review score: 

Second Edition is due out soon (September 2006)
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-10
Review Date: 2006-08-10
The second edition of the book has more text than the first edition. It is an excellent book which is recommended for all science students especilly those in the USA where Imperial units are still in use.
In the second edition you'll see the address of the author's website site which should also be available by mid September.
[...]
In the second edition you'll see the address of the author's website site which should also be available by mid September.
[...]
Trivia Resource for Quiz Questions
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-24
Review Date: 2006-03-24
This book is ideal for preparing questions for a trivia quiz on SI (metric) units. It's also a good resource for teachers to illustrate the use of prefixes in maths, also spelling and language work in this subject.

Dreamdust
Published in Paperback by Trafford Publishing (2001-11-09)
List price: $30.55
New price: $30.55
Used price: $6.30
Used price: $6.30
Average review score: 

Book Review: "Dreamdust."
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-21
Review Date: 2002-06-21
Without exception, "Dreamdust" is the best novel our reading group has read.
Five stars aren't enough for this bittersweet tale of a country boy's obsession with the green-eyed girl from Clear Falls, Wisconsin. The lean streetwise dialogue and melodic sentences paint a vivid portrait of "the silent generation" that came of age in the days of James Dean. The main character, Danny, is the most quietly offbeat rebel "with" a cause in any novel. A complete original!
Five stars aren't enough for this bittersweet tale of a country boy's obsession with the green-eyed girl from Clear Falls, Wisconsin. The lean streetwise dialogue and melodic sentences paint a vivid portrait of "the silent generation" that came of age in the days of James Dean. The main character, Danny, is the most quietly offbeat rebel "with" a cause in any novel. A complete original!
Moving, wistful, romantic, yet with a ray of future hope
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-10
Review Date: 2002-04-10
A young Wisconsin country man, graduate of the class of '57, pursues the most beautiful girl in all the land - or at least, all the neighborhood, and their involvement as well as a rising tide of torrential events push him into a life he never dreamed or hoped for - a single parent raising his children alone. Moving, wistful, romantic, yet with a single ray of future hope, Dreamdust is a most memorable and engaging story and is D. Russell's debut novel.
Exploring America's Highways: Wisconsin Trip Trivia (American Midwest)
Published in Paperback by Travel Organization Network Exchange, Inc. (2004-07)
List price: $19.95
New price: $18.00
Used price: $9.76
Used price: $9.76
Average review score: 

You will never put this book on your shelf permanently.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-05
Review Date: 2006-01-05
If you ever wondered (like I do), just how the contestants of TV programs such as Jeopardy and Do you want to be a millionaire? prepare to answer their questions; we have to assume they do their homework. By this I mean, in preparation, they must burn the midnight oil over a selection of reference books such as: The Bible, an Encyclopedia, a Dictionary, the Guinness Book of World Records and the latest copy of Who's Who?
Well, I have now discovered another set of books that I would definitely add to the above list. It is Exploring America's Highways - Trip Trivia. My review here covers three of the books, specifically relating to: Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. In the near future, the author, Michael Heim, will be releasing another 12 books covering the States of: Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, North and South Dakota.
But, even if you are not a quiz show contestant, these books will provide you with a wealth of pleasure and information. And, if you know your destination and you thoroughly enjoy traveling by car, motorcycle, bicycle or recreational vehicle, you most certainly should not be without this series of books.
You've heard the expression, "Half the fun of arriving is in the "getting there". Well, I can assure you, almost ALL of the fun in getting there is to be accompanied by Michael Heim's trip trivia books.
Not only do these books inform you "how to get there" but they provide the reader with a wealth of travel trivia about the history of how towns and cities received their names, local landmarks, all significant happenings associated with each location, prominent people from each place as well as all historical events and a wealth of general trivia.
I must add that these highly entertaining and informative books are intended to open your eyes and minds to the thousands of facts, details, historical references and anecdotes about the many hundreds of places within these three states. They are also a guaranteed remedy for any possible boredom that might develop while driving, especially with children. As such, do not expect to find listings of addresses and phone numbers for hotels, motels, restaurants or other places normally associated with the contents of traditional travel guides.
After reading only a few pages of any one book, you will find you have ventured into a cornucopia of interesting information. For example, for years I have been driving to Chicago from Detroit and I usually stop in Kalamazoo, Michigan as my half way respite for a snack and cup of coffee. Well now, I know a great deal more about my rest stop. The actual name comes from the Native Americans who originally named the place "Kalamazoo", a place where water boils. However, the location was first called Bronson after its first settler, Titus Bronson from Connecticut. I'll let you read the facts on why the townsfolk eventually petitioned to have the name changed from Bronson to Kalamazoo, however, I will also leave you with a piece of trivia. Did you know that Kalamazoo is the only town in Michigan where Abraham Lincoln ever spoke? Neither did I!
And, what about Manistique in Northern Michigan? If your trip happens to be taking you from Ironwood to St. Ignace, you will learn that Manistique comes from the Indian word "monistique" which means the color vermilion in reference to the color of the local water.
Over in Wisconsin, where my husband was born, he has a cousin living in Ixonia. In Mr. Heim's Wisconsin Trip Trivia book, I learned the town was named by a Mary Piper who randomly picked out letters of the alphabet. When written down, they formed the word Ixonia. And, the name, Ixonia, is the only town of that name in the entire United States.
Of course, as your routing may take you through other areas of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, you will find the vastly important role Native American Indians contributed in the naming and historical significance of today's villages, towns and cities.
Although I could provide dozens of more pieces of trivia that excited me, I hope you now have the flavor of Mr. Heim's almost monumental collection of facts. I can only imagine these books being read to children as families travel across our nation's highways. And, I can only envy them in having this modern, factual and absolutely fun way of learning history.
And, who knows? Someday, you or someone you know may actually be invited to be a quiz show contestant.
Well, I have now discovered another set of books that I would definitely add to the above list. It is Exploring America's Highways - Trip Trivia. My review here covers three of the books, specifically relating to: Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan. In the near future, the author, Michael Heim, will be releasing another 12 books covering the States of: Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, North and South Dakota.
But, even if you are not a quiz show contestant, these books will provide you with a wealth of pleasure and information. And, if you know your destination and you thoroughly enjoy traveling by car, motorcycle, bicycle or recreational vehicle, you most certainly should not be without this series of books.
You've heard the expression, "Half the fun of arriving is in the "getting there". Well, I can assure you, almost ALL of the fun in getting there is to be accompanied by Michael Heim's trip trivia books.
Not only do these books inform you "how to get there" but they provide the reader with a wealth of travel trivia about the history of how towns and cities received their names, local landmarks, all significant happenings associated with each location, prominent people from each place as well as all historical events and a wealth of general trivia.
I must add that these highly entertaining and informative books are intended to open your eyes and minds to the thousands of facts, details, historical references and anecdotes about the many hundreds of places within these three states. They are also a guaranteed remedy for any possible boredom that might develop while driving, especially with children. As such, do not expect to find listings of addresses and phone numbers for hotels, motels, restaurants or other places normally associated with the contents of traditional travel guides.
After reading only a few pages of any one book, you will find you have ventured into a cornucopia of interesting information. For example, for years I have been driving to Chicago from Detroit and I usually stop in Kalamazoo, Michigan as my half way respite for a snack and cup of coffee. Well now, I know a great deal more about my rest stop. The actual name comes from the Native Americans who originally named the place "Kalamazoo", a place where water boils. However, the location was first called Bronson after its first settler, Titus Bronson from Connecticut. I'll let you read the facts on why the townsfolk eventually petitioned to have the name changed from Bronson to Kalamazoo, however, I will also leave you with a piece of trivia. Did you know that Kalamazoo is the only town in Michigan where Abraham Lincoln ever spoke? Neither did I!
And, what about Manistique in Northern Michigan? If your trip happens to be taking you from Ironwood to St. Ignace, you will learn that Manistique comes from the Indian word "monistique" which means the color vermilion in reference to the color of the local water.
Over in Wisconsin, where my husband was born, he has a cousin living in Ixonia. In Mr. Heim's Wisconsin Trip Trivia book, I learned the town was named by a Mary Piper who randomly picked out letters of the alphabet. When written down, they formed the word Ixonia. And, the name, Ixonia, is the only town of that name in the entire United States.
Of course, as your routing may take you through other areas of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, you will find the vastly important role Native American Indians contributed in the naming and historical significance of today's villages, towns and cities.
Although I could provide dozens of more pieces of trivia that excited me, I hope you now have the flavor of Mr. Heim's almost monumental collection of facts. I can only imagine these books being read to children as families travel across our nation's highways. And, I can only envy them in having this modern, factual and absolutely fun way of learning history.
And, who knows? Someday, you or someone you know may actually be invited to be a quiz show contestant.
2005 Writers Notes Book Award Winner
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-18
Review Date: 2005-05-18
Three hefty volumes dissect Minnesota, Michigan, and Wisconsin respectively from your car window. Each book is packed with easy to read facts and trivia. Heim organizes the fun, not by territory, but by highway. If you found yourself on Route 169 outside Winnebago, Minnesota (i.e. named after the Indians, not a motorized trailer), you'd know that Scottish settlers there introduced curling to the state, or if you approached Laurium, Michigan on Route 41, you'd know that this was the birthplace of halfback George Gipp who once told Knute Rockne on his deathbed to "win one for the Gipper."
Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Television-->Trivia-->13
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This is a book for baseball fans only but I am sure they will enjoy it.