Humor Books
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Used price: $3.85

Love Your Grandma, She's a Special LadyReview Date: 2007-08-24
Not Your Run of the Mill Grandma!Review Date: 2007-08-07
When I first started reading Through the Rug, I thought it would be a normal book, then I quickly realized that it would turn out to be even better. After turning her dog named Domino from black and white to hot pink and green, Grandma next turns to a recipe for doing something that we have all at one time or another wanted to do, create more days of the week.
An accident during the experiment ends up taking Alyssa, Grandma, and Domino to the magic world of Wishville, where no long faces are tolerated and only happy people are allowed. The inter-generational fun only begins from there.
Your child and you will both enjoy cooking up an afternoon's fun reading Through the Rug. The only drawback is that at a mere 94 pages, the fun ends too soon.
About the reviewer: Kenneth R. Besser is a stay-at-home dad who is the author of Arnie Carver and the Plague of Demeverde
Thorugh the Rug is a GREAT book!Review Date: 2008-04-26
Check out the official Through the Rug website now [...].
Or purchase the book from Amazon: [...]
A Magical AdventureReview Date: 2008-03-08
Daphne A. Nowell, author
Juana Meets Gabriel, the Small Business Angel (Business Angel Books) (Business Angel Books)
Love it, love it, love it Review Date: 2008-02-04

A fun science bookReview Date: 2006-11-16
To Know A FlyReview Date: 2007-03-11
Title: To Know A Fly
Author: Vincent G. Dethier
Publisher: Holden Day; New Ed (June 1963)
Paperback: 119 pages
ISBN: 0070165742
Language: English
The complexity and simplicity of the "fly" has been ingeniously revealed to readers of all ages and breadth of scientific knowledge in Vincent G. Dethier's To Know A Fly. While the general reader may not be attracted to a book about flies due to the associated cultural stigma that brands flies as disgusting, ugly, useless pests this book brings attention to their value in regards to the advancement of scientific research.
To Know a Fly is a painless approach to the nature and value of the scientific method with the capability of exciting even the non-scientist. The employment of creative yet simple experiments are conveyed with both humor and wit. While trying to explain the importance of experimental controls Dethier tells a story of a man who believed he had trained a flea to jump. The man prepares an experiment where he progressively removes different appendages. First the feelers are removed and when the man requests "jump" the flea jumps. He continues to remove different parts and the flea continues to jump on command. Eventually only the flea's hind legs remain at which point he removes them and the flea fails to respond to the command. The man concludes that fleas hear with their hind legs. This statement is of course silly yet a great illustration that if experimental controls had been in place a more accurate conclusion could have been generated.
As the author artfully leads the reader on a journey of wonder exploring the many idiosyncrasies of fly, the reader is presented with many simple experiments that can be preformed at home. For example, in one experiment the reader is guided to answer the question: Do flies taste with their feet? First the fly is frozen in the freezer to immobilize him and then swiftly attached at the wings to a pencil that has been coated with hot candle wax. The fly is then lowered so that his feet touch the top of a bowl of water - if the fly is thirsty he will lower his proboscis. When he is done he will retract the proboscis. If the fly's feet are then lowered into a bowl of sugar-water he will quickly extend his proboscis and when quickly dipped into the water again he will retract the proboscis. I'm looking forward to trying some of these experiments myself once the snow melts and I can actually find some flies.
In addition to wondering if flies taste with their feet Dethier asks and answers some other silly yet curious questions, throughout the text, concerning fly behavior and physiology such as: Does the fly land on the ceiling by executing a half roll or an inside loop? To which Dethier reveals the answer is quite interesting. Flies actually hover below the ceiling, reach up above their bodies and attach their front legs to the ceiling and then flip their body over and attach the other legs. A more complicated question presented in the text is: What mechanism causes a fly to select different proteins at particular stages in life? Dethier not only provides several possibilities to explain this phenomenon but also suggests possible experiments to test these hypotheses.
Dethier asserts that the acquisition of fancy equipment and a college degree may help foster a great scientist but that there are two essentials: an insatiable curiosity about life and an experimental organism. He asserts that flies are the ideal experimental organism made up of over 50,000 species. However, today, 44 years after the publishing of this book, there are over 100,000 known species of flies. The validity of some facts in this book can be questioned due to the major advancements in technology that have taken place in the last 50 years. It is recommended that the information in this book be used as a guide rather than as a reference book for it is much too old and out of date.
However due to his credibility it is likely that information in this book was presented accurately based on the current information at the time it was written because Dr. Vincent G. Dethier was a prominent insect physiologist, research entomologist and an expert in his field. He wrote over 170 scientific papers and 15 scientific books of which To Know A Fly and several other books that were written for individuals that did not have a scientific background one of which, Crickets & Katydids: Concerts and Solos, won the John Burroughs Medal for distinguished Nature Writing
Dethier's common sense approach to science makes it enjoyable for anyone with a curiosity for the way the world works. This would be a great book for students starting out in science or students with an aversion to science because it is presented in a humorous tone with interesting antidotes to keep the readers attention. Because this book was written for a non-science audience there is not a lot of technical language among the 14 short chapters making this book easily read within two sittings.
From start to finish there are intertwined stories, experiments, facts, observations, cartoons, questions, and even excerpts from plays. This compilation of different types of writing within one book allows the reader to not only walk away with some noteworthy facts about the fly but also insight into the mind of a scientist. In addition, the simplicistic manner in which the information is presented is capable of provoking thought in even the most advanced scientists.
ToKnow A FlyReview Date: 2004-07-20
To Know a FlyReview Date: 2001-12-28
An entertaining classicReview Date: 2000-05-10
Amidst entertaining passages describing how to anethesize a fly (pop it in in the freezer) or make fly scapels (break up razor blades) or surgical probes (drop dressmaker's pins on the floor) you'll learn, in passing, a lot about the neurophysiology of the fly.
If you're student in the life sciences, you owe it to yourself to hunt down a copy of this book. If you're a reader with even a casual interest in science, grab this one if you come across a copy.

Used price: $21.94

A Fun Ride on the Toy Trunk RailroadReview Date: 2000-03-04
Toy Trunk RR LOLReview Date: 2000-03-02
A classic rideReview Date: 2000-02-13
Actually, there are three amazing things about TTR and this first collection: I have zero interest in the paraphrenalia of trains -- the consequence of being friends with a railfan -- but a complete fascination with surefooted humor. TTR may get about on a rail, but its feet are firmly planted on the ground; smartly dressed in clown shoes.
I'd mention that the main characters are sharply penned and entirely convincing, but I've already surpassed my list of two amazements; I'll leave the rest of the wonders to your discovery.
Imaginative stuff!Review Date: 2000-02-06
Ride the rails on Toy Trunk RailroadReview Date: 2000-05-09


okay, okay...THIS is where it is...Review Date: 2008-09-15
Wayland has brought back, with full spirit, the true genre of entertaining horror story, and at times i get the same vibes from this as i do from reading King or Lovecraft, in the sense that he builds a whole atmosphere...an entire universe, and puts the reader in it to experience and suffer threw everything each character undergoes...
A GREAT READ!
Can't wait for the sequels!Review Date: 2007-02-03
A new twist on an old horror staple.Review Date: 2006-08-17
The bloodletting has just begun!!!Review Date: 2006-08-14
Delightfully DirtyReview Date: 2006-07-08

Used price: $7.95

Gaspirtz Takes a Spite out of Crime!Review Date: 1999-08-26
Very Funny!! Great cartoons!!Review Date: 1999-08-25
a needed chuckle....Review Date: 1999-09-02
It's a clever and funny book.Review Date: 1999-09-04
"Hilarious, Innovative, and Long Overdue"Review Date: 1999-08-28

Used price: $0.97

Fun, frivolous readReview Date: 2006-12-12
He Said/She SaidReview Date: 2006-05-04
The Truth Behind the Rock is such a reliefReview Date: 2006-05-01
Like a dishy lunch with your wittiest girlfriend!Review Date: 2006-07-06
Kaminsky writes with a humor and a humanity that are both disarming and comforting, and she offers a point of view I hadn't ever seen before in a book about relationships. "The Truth Behind the Rock" feels like it was written by a girlfriend rather than a preachy psychologist! The couples she talks about in the book are clearly real people with relatable relationship issues. Reading this book feels just like sitting down with your best girlfriend to a dishy lunch. It made me laugh, but it also made me smile. And as soon as I finished it I got another copy to give to my best (engaged) girlfriend!
I was ashamed...until I read this book!Review Date: 2006-05-18
This books made me see that I am not the only one that had to basically force-feed my boyfriend into engagement. "IT'S TIME" was not obvious enough. After a grueling tennis match in the heat of summer, throwing a tennis racket at my boyfriend's head felt like the right thing to do. And it left a nice bump. And he finally saw the light.
Thank you, Jessica. I feel much better and more confident that I did the right thing and men just need a little nudge. Or two. Or three. Or a tennis racket to the head.

Collectible price: $10.82

Mr. Wodehouse...A must read authorReview Date: 2008-08-12
Another Wodehouse winner!Review Date: 2008-06-08
A Comic MasterpieceReview Date: 2005-05-24
Wodehouse wrote novels and stories that can be easily classified into several series: there are the Bertie and Jeeves novels and stories, the Blandings Castle novels and stories, the Mr. Mulliner stories, the Uncle Fred novels, etc. The characters from one series rarely appear in another. This novel is an exception. Uncle Fred appears at Blandings Castle, where he poses as Sir Roderick Glossop, normally seen in the Bertie and Jeeves novels (and one story); indeed, he encounters Sir Roderick while traveling to Blandings Castle. Uncle Fred, properly, Frederick Altamont Cornwallis Twistleton, fifth Earl of Ickenham, is a man who "together with a juvenile waistline, . . . still retained the bright enthusiasms and the fresh, unspoiled outlook of a slightly inebriated undergraduate" at the age of sixty or so. It is he who sets in motion the events that enable young lovers to marry and his nephew Pongo to settle his gambling debts. In general, his role is that normally played by Lord Emsworth's younger brother Galahad.
Of course, any reader of Wodehouse novels knows at the start that things will turn out all right for any sundered hearts or frustrated lovers, as he knows that, any time the efficient Baxter appears, he will be discredited despite being thoroughly correct. The fun is in discovering just how it happens.
And what fun it is. Wodehouse's mastery of the English language is unrivaled. He succeeds in producing prose that not only is enjoyable in its own right but also moves events ahead at a pace that is nigh exhausting. In the Bertie and Jeeves novels and stories, it is Bertie's narration that does this. In this novel, it is the dialogue as much as the narration that moves events ahead, establishes the characters, and gives the reader immense pleasure.
My All-Time Favorite BookReview Date: 2002-11-07
scrumptious!Review Date: 2002-06-16

Used price: $0.61

great giftReview Date: 2007-02-06
Enormous Book!Review Date: 2007-01-20
Interesting StuffReview Date: 2007-01-19
Makes you a little more interesting.Review Date: 2006-06-12
Batroom Reader Should Make Space In Your Bathroom! Review Date: 2006-06-16
Dumb Crooks. If youre looking for a good book I would definitely recommend this book. Also, if you are loking for books to fill your shelf, the bathroom reader series should be on your shopping list.- FeatherBall

Used price: $0.13

Great deal ... exactly as described. Review Date: 2007-01-10
Uncle John's Giant 10th Anniversary Bathroom ReaderReview Date: 2006-08-05
Great for anytimeReview Date: 1999-12-14
My Boss Hates this book, but we love it!!!Review Date: 2003-12-04
But beware!!! Especially bosses out there who don't want their employees taking long bathroom breaks. When this book is put into a bathroom, the bathroom suddenly becomes one of the most popular rooms in the place.
Took a Risk buying this book, SO GLAD I DID!Review Date: 2003-12-23
You never know what the next page will reveal, it's always a surprise. I also enjoy the bottom of the pages that give you one line info tidbits such as "How can you tell when a kangaroo is nervous? It licks its forearms. Nobody knows why." Interesting! And...."20% of drivers get 80% of the traffic tickets".....and finally "60% of pets in Great Britain have some form of health insurance". Great facts that you'd normally not read elsewhere. This book has 500 pages, lots of reading, and we were surprised it's so interesting. I will definitely buy another edition of this BRI (Bathroom Reader's Institute) Series. Probably great to give as gifts (for fun).
Enjoy and remember like the book says "Go with the flow".

Used price: $12.52

circusReview Date: 2002-05-06
My favorite aspect is the way they pull the blanket off of marketing schemes. Every transaction we make using the Dollar is riddled with business and capitalist strategies; paying tuition is no exception!
circusReview Date: 2002-05-06
My favorite aspect is the way they pull the blanket off of marketing schemes. Every transaction we make using the Dollar is riddled with business and capitalist strategies; paying tuition is no exception!
circusReview Date: 2002-05-06
My favorite aspect is the way they pull the blanket off of marketing schemes. Every transaction we make using the Dollar is riddled with business and capitalist strategies; paying tuition is no exception!
I Laughed So HARD it hurt!Review Date: 2002-04-25
Hysterical college catalogReview Date: 2002-11-30
A good example of the strength of the satirical style would be the Hysterical Blindness Award. A student scholarship, it is awarded to two students who "simply convince themselves that the world doesn't have any problems. Award is very similar to how the United States of America refuses to officially recognize the nuclear capabilities of countries it doesn't like." Or perhaps a little information on one of the clubs would be a better illustration. How about the Future Corporate Raiders of America? They "conduct hostile take-overs of other campus groups, fire all the old members and sell their club equipment back to the University. Predatory instinct and lack of humanity required."
A thoroughly enjoyable read it is highly recommended for those that enjoy satire and parody. Pick up a copy today and have a good laugh at a course catalog for real life.
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