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The Book of Bunny Suicides

Andy Riley

The Book of Bunny Suicides Andy Riley Amazon Price: $8.00
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By: Plume
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Subjects -> Comics & Graphic Novels -> Comic Strips -> General
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Subjects -> Comics & Graphic Novels -> Cartooning

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 52 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

SICK SICK series 1 out of 5 stars.
2 of 9 people found this review helpful.

Bunnies are sweet,loving,and innocent creatures and anyone who could write books with this sort of theme is a very sick person as are everyone who would find it funny!! If it was about children there would be a major outcry over it,but because its not its ok. Animals are just as helpless as children so if you wouldn't want books like this about children don't condone it about bunnies or any other animals!!

Editorial Review:

Rabbits. We'll never quite know why, but sometimes they decide they've just had enough of this world- and that's when they start getting inventive. The Book of Bunny Suicides follows over one hundred bunnies as they find ever more outlandish ways to do themselves in. From an encounter with the business end of Darth Vader's lightsaber, to supergluing themselves to a diving submarine, to hanging around underneath a loose stalactite, these bunnies are serious about suicide.

Illustrated in a stark and simple style, The Book of Bunny Suicides is a collection of hilarious and outrageous cartoons that will appeal to anyone in touch with their evil side.

Happyslapped by a Jellyfish: The words of Karl Pilkington

Karl Pilkington

Happyslapped by a Jellyfish: The words of Karl Pilkington Karl Pilkington Amazon Price: $13.60
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By: DK ADULT
Amazon Marketplace: 31 new & used starting at $11.83

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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 21 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Ohh Chimpanzee that...Monkey News you fffff.... 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

Karl is the king, but he has become a lazy king, and his subjects are getting restless. MORE PODCAST NOW YOU ORANGE HEADED MONKEY FREAK!!!!

...And there better be new monkey news included in the podcast...I'm just sayin'....

But about the book....Great book. Karl's an idiot, but strangely, his book creates a very enjoyable read. I esp. liked when he talked about the squirrles in Carmel, CA. I live by there, and I've seen those squirrles, and I want to go back and see if they've been traumatized by meeting Karl.

Awesome 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

Great book. Karl IS a genius, Ricky is the idiot, I know this cos im a genius and if Karl isn't one then im not, but I am, so he is, so there. Love it!

Editorial Review:

A collection of baffling, hilarious, infuriating yet curiously compelling insights and anecdotes, diary entries, poems, "true" facts, cartoons, and assorted witterings concerning travel from the mind of Karl Pilkington, the unlikely star of the Ricky Gervais Show, the World's funniest and most successful podcast.

The Book of Useless Information

Noel Botham

The Book of Useless Information Noel Botham List Price: $12.95
By: Perigee Trade
Amazon Marketplace: 16 new & used starting at $3.55

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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 14 Average rating: 2.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

Thousands of things you didn't think you needed to know-and probably don't.

All you never needed to know, and couldn't be bothered to ask.

One person's useless information could prove invaluable to someone else. Then again, maybe not. But to The Useless Information Society, any fact that passes its gasp-inducing, "not-a-lot-of-people-know- that" test merits inclusion in this fascinating but ultimately useless book.

Did you know...
- That fish scales are used to make lipstick?
- Why organized crime accounts for ten percent of the United States's annual income?
- The name of the first CD pressed in the U.S.?
- The shortest performance ever nominated for an Oscar?
- How much Elvis weighed at the time of his death?
- What the suits in a deck of cards represent?
- How many Quarter Pounders can be made from one cow?
- How interesting useless information can be?

The Book of Useless Information answers these teasers and will captivate readers with the joy of pursuing pointless knowledge.

The DailyCandy Lexicon: Words That Don't Exist But Should

Editors of Daily Candy

The DailyCandy Lexicon: Words That Don't Exist But Should Editors of Daily Candy Amazon Price: $10.17
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By: Virgin Books
Amazon Marketplace: 42 new & used starting at $6.19

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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 2 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

Learn a New Word From The Daily Candy Lexicon (Click to See More)

Writers at Daily Candy have the inside line on the latest food, fashion and pop culture trends. With their trademark sass and savvy, they’re offering up a list of new words for everyday situations—and several words that don't exist, but should—in The Daily Candy Lexicon. Don’t leave home without it!






Product Description

The experts on all things cool and of-the-moment offer a glossary of the cleverest words you’ve never heard.

Women the world over have been nursing a powerful addiction—to DailyCandy.com. A daily email newsletter covering absolutely everything (from lacy bras that actually fit to restaurant openings to children’s museums), it’s the ultimate insider’s guide to what’s new and undiscovered. It’s like having a great conversation with a girlfriend—a girlfriend who tells you where to get your eyebrows threaded (and anything else that might need it), who knows when the best sample sales are, and who can make you laugh. Really hard. Beloved as much for its witty, edgy writing as it is for its far-reaching information, DailyCandy has also grown into the go-to site for how to talk about it all, every day offering up a round-up of the latest in hip expressions. Always the trendsetter, DailyCandy has defined and invented words and terms that just are becoming popular—or should be. Smart, funny, and sassy, The DailyCandy Lexicon is a compilation of these definitions, invaluable whether you’re a “girleen” (a young sassy woman) or a “SoDeeWah” (socialite/ designer/whatever). Accompanying the listing is a behind-the-keyboard narrative of how the DailyCandy staff came up with the entries.

Maybe you’re tired of talking the way you’ve talked for years (please stop calling things “dope”), or maybe you’re embarrassed that you didn’t know what your cubicle-mate meant by “desk burn” (it’s an injury sustained during in-office sex). Either way, you need a dose of The DailyCandy Lexicon:

· Tart fuel: n. Girlie drinks. e.g., cosmos, kirs, or anything that tastes like Kool-Aid.

· Teenile: adj. Used to describe someone who is way too old for what she is wearing. (“That 45-year-old woman is wearing low-cut jeans. Is she crazy or just teenile?”)

· Kama-suture: n. Aid for injuries sustained during aerobic bedroom exercises (particularly by non-aerobic types).

· Crapas: n. One of the many bad versions of the “small plates” craze.

· Apathy hour: n. What happy hour usually feels like.

Fuck This Book

Bodhi Oser

Fuck This Book Bodhi Oser Amazon Price: $14.95
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By: Chronicle Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 30 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Sophomoric 1 out of 5 stars.
3 of 7 people found this review helpful.

This shtick is great, perhaps, if you're a giggling adolescent boy. But once you've grown your own pubes, one would hope that you'd outgrown the shock-humor of dirty words.

Not worth the money 3 out of 5 stars.
1 of 4 people found this review helpful.

This book is a lot shorter than it appears. It has very little re-readability because of this. I would save my money and just browse the selected pages online.

Editorial Review:

Juvenile, profane, and timeless, Fuck This Book collects images of real public signs that have been mischieveously altered by stickers bearing the most expressive of all four-letter words. Addictively hilarious, the results show a world persuasively transformed. Please Don't Fuck the Pigeons, indeed. What happens if one triggers the Automatic Sprinkler Fuck Off Valve? And is it any wonder The Fuck Depot is so popular? All photographs are unretouched—the result of countless hours on the hunt for the almost perfect sign, in need of just the slightest improvement. This is not social commentary. There is no message. It's not meant to offend, exploit, or embarrass anyone. All real stickers. All real signs. All in fun.

Great Lies to Tell Small Kids

Andy Riley

Great Lies to Tell Small Kids Andy Riley Amazon Price: $8.80
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By: Plume
Amazon Marketplace: 50 new & used starting at $1.37

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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 8 Average rating: 3.0 of 5

"If you utter the trigger word 'Badminton' to your grandmother..." 5 out of 5 stars.
5 of 7 people found this review helpful.

"...her original programming will activate and she will kill all humans."

This caption runs underneath a picture of an elderly woman in a rocking chair reading, while a boy looks at her trepidatiously.

If you find this sort of thing amusing, I suspect that like me, you'll very much enjoy this book. These comics are sort of like a British youngsters version of Dan Piraro's excellent "Bizarro." By making things deliberately topsy-turvy, Andy Riley gets us to think about the world in a different way.

And that's a good thing.

Also recommended: Bizarro and Other Strange Manifestations of the Art of Dan Piraro

Editorial Review:

New, wicked humor from the author of the bestselling Bunny Suicides books

On the heels of his runaway Bunny Suicides books, cartoonist Andy Riley turns his irreverent wit to another group of small creatures that lurk among us seemingly everywhere: children.

From the benign (every ant you meet must be named) to the truly cruel (Ronald McDonald is dead!), each hilarious cartoon has a tall tale to educate children and entertain wicked adults everywhere.

Praise for Andy Riley:
“Wonderfully deviant.”—The Washington Post
“It’s the funniest, bunniest book I’ve ever read.”—Elton John
“Brilliantly researched.The most important book of the year.”—Hugh Grant

Chinglish

Oliver Lutz Radtke

Chinglish Oliver Lutz Radtke Amazon Price: $7.99
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By: Gibbs Smith, Publisher
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Save the signs 5 out of 5 stars.
4 of 4 people found this review helpful.

If you have ever visited China, you may have come across a sign that says "Little grass has life" or similiar bewildering phrases on signboards.

Here's now a fine collection of many other such instances that have been documented by author Oliver Lutz Radtke.

"Chinglish" provides us with a solid insight into the everyday use of the Chinese language on bilingual signs and boards.

The book demonstrates a unique way of expressing ideas, intentions and interests.

Pictures of the Chinese originals in it's entirety are displayed and backed up by English elaborations of the intended meaning.

At first glance, the book probably strikes the reader as one that heightens the perceived idea that China's
"lingiustic misadventures" are a result of incompetence and a lack of knowledge.

This impression is quickly banished as it transforms into a new point of view:

A very creative method of expressing circumstances, requests and prohibitions emerge - completely different from the European way of phrasing caution or providing warning for instructions like "stay off the grass."

These bilingual signs and boards (even with all the "mistakes" in them) documents a Chinese attempt to reach an international audience.

So for me "Chinglish" isn't primarily a local linguistic phenomenon but a sociological one: It's a way of thinking about possible communication settings.

Respectfully, the author analyzes several models of sociological and physiological explanations and his deep insight into Chinese mentality and language is inherent.

Editorial Review:

Chinglish offers a humorous and insightful look at misuses of the English language in Chinese street signs, products, and advertising. A long-standing favorite of English speaking tourists and visitors, Chinglish is now quickly becoming a culture relic: in preparation for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, the Chinese government is determined to wipe out incorrect English usage.

BORAT: Touristic Guidings to Minor Nation of U.S. and A. and Touristic Guidings to Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan

Borat Sagdiyev

BORAT: Touristic Guidings to Minor Nation of U.S. and A. and Touristic Guidings to Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan Borat Sagdiyev Amazon Price: $16.47
List Price: $24.95
In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
By: Flying Dolphin Press
Amazon Marketplace: 58 new & used starting at $2.38

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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 25 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

This Book Really Is a Very Nice!
Tug on your snuggest swimsuit and get your papers in order: (in)famous international sojourner Borat Sagdiyev is here with the travel book of the year, BORAT: Touristic Guidings to Minor Nation of U.S. and A. and Touristic Guidings to Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan. Packed with helpful tips, BORAT offers off-the-beaten-path recommendations and "will instruct you on all you needing know" for your next family vacation, be it at home or abroad. Check out these images from the book:






Jeff Foxworthy's Redneck Dictionary III: Learning to Talk More Gooder Fastly

Jeff Foxworthy

Jeff Foxworthy's Redneck Dictionary III: Learning to Talk More Gooder Fastly Jeff Foxworthy Amazon Price: $6.99
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By: Ballantine Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

Jeff Foxworthy clearly knows how to talk gooder redneck, especially after two runaway bestsellers on the subject. But for those folks who still need to get in touch with their inner redneck, here’s the third handy reference with even more indigenous idiomatic ingenuity. With Jeff as your guide, you’ll get all the finer points of speaking proper redneck. Here’s your chance to pep up your parlance by learning how to use words and phrases like

an• ar• chist (an-ar-kist´), conj., n., and v. additionally, having pressed one’s lips to another’s as an expression of affection or sensual desire. “Anarchist her ma, anarchist her sister, anarchist her gramma, anarchist her other sister, anarchist her other other sister, and then her dad walked in and . . .”

i• Pod (í-päd), n. and v. a personal reference to having groped or roughly handled another person or an object. “IPod her for about twenty minutes before I realized she was my mother-in-law.”

uri• nal (yer-en-el), n. and v. a declaration concerning the current status or location of the person being spoken to. “If you think urinal lot of trouble now, just wait till Daddy gets home.”

No matter where you hail from, Jeff Foxworthy’s Redneck Dictionary III will make you sound like you were born far below the Mason-Dixon line. So shove aside that extra roll of single-ply to make space for this book in your family’s reading room, because three is definitely the charm.


From the Hardcover edition.

Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy Book: 10 3/4 Anniversary Edition

Brian Froud

Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy Book: 10 3/4 Anniversary Edition Brian Froud Amazon Price: $16.47
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 16 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Not for Kids 2 out of 5 stars.
7 of 11 people found this review helpful.

I bought this book for my daughters, age 8 and 3. I ordered it online without ever having seen a real copy, but instead looking at the first few pages displayed on the Amazon site; specifically the page with the little 5 year-old girl's handwriting - misspellings and all - about capturing her first fairy. I thought it would be a cute children's book that my daughters would enjoy.

Instead, it turned out to be a very adult book dealing with the theme of sexual repression in turn-of-the-century England. For adults, I thought this was a very good book -- for children, totally inappropriate. I would have appreciated this being addressed in the description of the book since I believe it's presented in a kid's book manner.

*spoilers* As a little girl, Angelica Cottington captures fairies in her book, and blames the little mischief-makers for doing things like stealing her stockings and changing the answers on her homework so that by the morning, her sums, which were correct the day before, are all wrong as to get her in trouble with her Governess.

As Cottington grows up, however, the fairies get the blame for her budding (and guilt-ridden) sexuality. At one point, she goes on holiday to Italy where a potential suitor shows up in her hotel room (after her "chaperone" has taken a sleeping drug and passed out in her own room) and what ensues can possibly be construed as a rape -- Cottington intends to say "no" to the man, but one of the fairies flies into her mouth and twists her tongue into saying yes.

Soon afterwards, she flees back to England where the fairies are more proper (touching on the stereotype that Italians are passionate and English are reserved.) When she gets home, however, the English fairies trick her into taking a hallucinogenic drug ("...the sweet nectar slipped around and over my tongue like a liquid glove of exquisite pleasure or pain -- I could not be sure which ..."), and causes her to take off all her clothes and dance around naked in a field. When she wakes up, a clergyman she has known all her life is hovering over her. She confesses to him that the fairies are making her do horrible things, and he admits to her "'Oh Lady Angelica! Yes! They torment me, too! Those little fairies!" .... His eyes had an unnerving intensity about them and he seemed to have dribbled on his purple front. At the same time, he slipped his arms around my waist. ... Your breasts are whiter than a five pound note ..." -- adding the theme of clergy taking sexual advantage of people they are supposed to be helping in their time of need.

This book would possibly make a good study for a college class on the subject of sexuality and history, particularly Western cultural sexual repression in women. But I REALLY think this book description should come with a warning about the content. It is very easy to misjudge it's intended audience based on what is available to look at on the Amazon website.

Editorial Review:

In 1995 Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy Book was released to an unsuspecting public. Called "an unstoppable phenomenon" by its publisher, it became an immediate international best-seller. Now 2005 can be named the Year of Lady Cottington with the 10th anniversary of the publication that first exposed the world to the science of fairy exploration.

This volume records in authentic facsimile the latest incarnation of this notorious book along with eight additional pages and enhanced artwork throughout, virtually overflowing with freshly flattened fairies. Former Monty Python member Terry Jones and artist Brian Froud provide a new introduction to place the book in its proper perspective, offering insight into the book's often maligned historic relevance. As a bonus, included is an incriminating DVD showing rare film footage of the elderly Lady Cottington in her garden demonstrating her fairy-squashing technique, as well as a photo gallery, desktop wallpaper, and screensavers.

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