Showing posts with label humor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label humor. Show all posts

Golden Years My Ass: Adventures in Geriatric Indignity Review

Golden Years My Ass: Adventures in Geriatric Indignity
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This book should be called Geriatric Senility. It is the most incoherent mess imaginable. I'll admit, I'm no big fan of Roger Welsch books, but I thought this one might be better. It isn't. It's just a bunch of unrelated stories with the only tie in being Welsch's constant complaining about being an old geezer. Sorry, but this book just doesn't cut it.
Edit: I'm going to add something so people know just how gross this book is. Roger writes about going to the doctor, and the doctor inserted his big fingers into Roger's rectum. I found it disgusting.

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Roger Welsch's humorous take on his hahahaha Golden Years, a subject in which he now considers himself an expert. Portions of this book have been shared with friends facing medical problems and have each and every one found the humor encouraging and heartening. Anyone who is thinking about getting older will profit from a reading of this book. . .and of course anyone who is pretty much giving up might find something here that would change his mind. You can get old and complain, or get old and laugh; the choice is yours, and this volume gives you that choice.

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Prayer: the Key To Organizing Chaos Review

Prayer: the Key To Organizing Chaos
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Judy did a great job relating to a woman's everyday conflict with keeping things in place and not losing your mind. She cleverly weaves prayer into each situation she describes and focuses on why we need God in our daily chaos to get through. I have met and spoke with this author and she is personable, loving and glows with the gifts that God has given her. As a professional who raised 5 children I laughed at some of the experiences and found myself nodding in agreement with her, I recommend this book for any one who runs a home and family, male or female!!

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Do you feel the dog is the only one who likes the way your house is run? And, he only likes it because of the steady supply of food on the floor and knows unfolded laundry makes a great doggie bed! In Prayer: The Key to Organized Chaos, professional organizing consultant Judith Gilmore Black, reveals the key that unlocks the door to self-worth and organization for the Christian homemaker. That key is prayer. By putting the Word of God first, humorously woven devotional thoughts second, prayer covering it all followed by detailed organizational advice, this book uniquely brings a spiritual method to conquering clutter. From the bathroom to the bills, Prayer: The Key to Organized Chaos will help any reader view tasks through the Word bringing value to everyday living.

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Motherly Advice from Cathy's Mom Review

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The Hot Mom's Handbook: Laugh and Feel Great from Playdate to Date Night... Review

The Hot Mom's Handbook: Laugh and Feel Great from Playdate to Date Night...
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I liked this book quite a bit. Like previous reviewer said, it's not necessarily a lot of NEW things, but is nonetheless very important. Sometimes it takes ten times of hearing it that you not only deserve, but NEED to make time for yourself, etc. I really liked the writing style and enjoyed that it was broken up into smaller chunks to read. And the book made me laugh three times (which is a lot for me).

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You've made it through nine months of baby bump, but now baby has arrived and it's a whole new set of rules. Not sure how to navigate this brave new world and new you?

From Jessica Denay, founder of the Hot Moms Club, comes the ultimate resource for moms of all ages trying to balance everything from playdate to date night, nightlife to nightlight. In this laugh-out-loud yet practical guide, Jessica shares how to break loose that inner Hot Mom and tackles everything from avoiding MILPs (Moms I'd Like to Punch) to Making Your Minivan Rock. Along with advice from celebrity moms, experts, and friends, the book has insights from Jessica's personal journey, as well as cheeky anecdotes you won't find in traditional parenting books.

Plus, don't miss her useful Baby on a Budget tips: Did you know that baby wipes double as makeup remover and how a little baby powder gives greasy hair a fresh start? Also, as a top celebrity party planner, Jessica shares her creative birthday and holiday ideas that will make your bashes stand out!


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How To Do Just About Everything Review

How To Do Just About Everything
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Look no further. Goodbye confusion. This book offers step by step instructions on just about everything ranging from money mannagement to home maintenance to personal care to gardening. It's refreshing to find 1001 different tasks and skills explained in such basic fashion. I like the 1-5 scale of difficulty "hammers" which highlight for a reader how hard it might be to complete a project. For example; carving a turkey = 3 hammers; caring for silver = one hammer and hitting a home run= five hammers. So stop procrastinating, get the book, roll up your sleeves and tackle that long overdue "list" of unfinished projects.

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The experts at eHow know how to do just about everything, and in this comprehensive reference book, they share their know-how with you. From pets to home improvement, sports to job survival, here are 1,001 how-to solutions to help you get the job done -- and done well. For every task, eHow provides concise step-by-step instructions, helpful tips and warnings, and useful lists of everything you'll need to get the job done. Browse these pages to discover how to: Tie a Tie * Plant a Lawn * Carve a Turkey * Write a Business Plan * Unclog a Sink * Ask for a Raise * Tango * Change Your Motor Oil * Sew on a Button * Write a Love Letter * Wash Your Cat * Lose Weight * Prevent Jet Lag * Throw a Knuckleball ...and much, much more Whatever you need to do, you'll now know where to look for complete, authoritative instructions. How to Do (Just About) Everything is packed with easy-to-follow step-by-step instructions, plus helpful checklists and calendars. A thorough keyword index makes it simple to find what you need. Keep this essential reference volume around the house and soon you'll wonder how you ever got anything done without it.

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Follies of Science: 20th Century Visions of Our Fantastic Future Review

Follies of Science: 20th Century Visions of Our Fantastic Future
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I'll admit to not having high expectations for this book; after all, it is only 128 pages long. Unfortunately, it was really disappointing. There just simply is not enough insightful information here to make it really interesting.
The goal of the book is to look at some of the more ridiculous predictions of the future made throughout history, from giant "land submarines" to jetpacks. But there are two big problems with how the authors treat this subject. The first is that their approach is very superficial--they touch on each subject quickly and then abandon it, rather than grouping them together in weightier themes. It's like eating finger foods, each bite is unsatisfying. Some of these subjects, like mega-cities or massive vehicles, also deserve a deeper discussion. Instead, the authors assert that (paraphrasing) "things are gigantic when times are good" and mention the dinosaurs and large prehistoric insects. That's a rather odd and imprecise statement to make, and although it might apply to biological entities, it doesn't necessarily apply to manmade objects. What about computers? Why are they getting smaller? And are big things naturally "good"?
The other major problem is a startling lack of dates. Photographs, magazine illustrations and diagrams are frequently presented without _any_ indication of when they were made. Is this illustration from the 1950s or the Depression-era 1930s? Isn't that relevant to why it might have been produced? Many of the pulp magazine covers are cropped in such a way that the dates are cut off, which is incredibly annoying. Thus, the book reads like a haphazzardly arranged scrapbook, without any keen insights about how or why people might make erroneous predictions about the future.

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Promises for the future were made; some sadly broken and some unfortunately honored. While we didn't get household jetpacks and personal serving-drinks-by-the-pool robots, or even our orgasmatrons, we did get things like the super-fantastic building materials of the future—asbestos, lead, and foam.

So just what was the utopian master plan for future households during the early twentieth century? Follies of Science is the keeper of such knowledge, offering glimpses into sparkling, smooth lead paint covering our living room walls, dazzling DDT foggers killing mosquitoes dead, alchemists transforming atoms into gold and diamonds, homeowners living in "The Foam House of the Future," and, of course, commuters blasting away on their jet packs to work. Utopian indeed.

Aptly illustrated with full-color and black-and-white classic imagery, the visions of the future spread across page after page, pulling the reader in to what could have been and what shouldn't have been.

Eric Dregni has written nine books, including Midwest Marvels, The Scooter Bible, Ads that Put America on Wheels, and Grazie a Dio non sono bolognese. As a 2004 Fulbright Fellow to the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in Trondheim, Dregni researched Scandinavian culture and roots for a forthcoming book. His time is divided between Italy, Norway, and Minneapolis where he is the curator for El Dorado Conquistador Museum and guitarist for the mock-rock trio Vinnie & the Stardüsters.

Jonathan Dregni is a futurist and sci-fi enthusiast, raising a family midway between the soon-to-be domed cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul Minnesota.


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How to Get Things Really Flat: Enlightenment for Every Man on Ironing, Vacuuming and Other Household Arts Review

How to Get Things Really Flat: Enlightenment for Every Man on Ironing, Vacuuming and Other Household Arts
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Have you ever seen the novelty book called Porn for Women? It features good-looking men doing housework with captions such as "Is this how you want the shirts folded?" or "I like to get started on the dishes right away."
How To Get Things Really Flat by Andrew Martin is the literary equivalent of Porn for Women ... except without the photos. Imagine an entire book dedicated to the art and "joys" of housekeeping written entirely by a man and for men!
Make no mistake ... this is not a dry guide to doing housework with charts and graphs and other things you might expect from a man. Instead, this is a humorous guide to housework that includes practical housekeeping tips but is primarily for enjoyment and entertainment. The book has 11 chapters, which each focusing on a different aspect of cleaning. Just reading some of the chapter headings will give you an idea of the book's tone.
* Chapter 3: Ironing includes sections such as "Do I Need To Bother With the Controls On the Iron?" and "What Is the Worst Thing That Can Happen During Ironing?"
* Chapter 4: Washing Up includes a section called "How To Load A Dishwasher Without Causing Comment."
* Chapter 6: Dust focuses on topics such as "During Dusting, Where Does the Dust Go?" and "Dusting Things That Are Really Hard To Dust."
* Chapter 7: Cleaning covers topics as diverse as "Toilet Cleaning: An Overview" and "How To Impress People with Bicarbonate of Soda."
* Chapter 8: The Weekly Shop includes sections on "Characteristics of the Male Shopper" and "I Suppose I've Got to Put the Food Away Now"
* Chapter 9: Doing Christmas, which includes a section called "What's the Least Amount of Time I Can Spend on Writing and Sending Christmas Cards?"
* Chapter 10: Advanced Housework focuses on things such as "Exotic Cleaning," "Moths" and "Household Aesthetics: A Brief Introduction for the Tasteless Man."
Martin has a droll writing style that fits the material perfectly. Although the book contains plenty of practical and useful information, Martin's approach is always amusing and typically male. After all, who else but a man would describe grocery shopping and the putting away of groceries like this:
"You come home with the food. You drop the bags in a heap just inside the front door. You call out, "I've done the shopping, now you put it away!" and then you stomp off and check your e-mails. It's a natural reaction to the shame of having spent half an hour in the supermarket. I mean, to all intents and purposes you've just taken a carving knife and cut your balls off. But there are double brownie points for the man who not only does the shopping but also puts it away, which is, in any case, satisfying work. You've stocked up on supplies and you're ready for anything: sudden illness, heavy snow, the withdrawal of your credit card. In the back of my mind, as I pack the shelves of my fridge, I'm Shackleton's quartermaster, stocking the Endeavour for its long voyage south."
Although women may not quite envision themselves as Shackleton's quartermaster after grocery shopping, I very much related to what got Martin in trouble before he learned how to properly grocery shop. In fact, I was unable to go grocery shopping unescorted for over a year because of the very same mistakes Martin made:
"My own strategy would be to seek consolation in the purchase of little treats. Having control of the food budget would go to my head, and I'd buy all the food prohibited to me in childhood: miniature chocolate Swiss rolls, Nesquik, a bumper bag of Frazzles. Even as I did this, I would be able to picture my wife pulling these items out of the bags at home and sternly inquiring, "You did remember the garbage bags, I hope?" Not having planned my shopping in advance, I'd be afflicted by a fatal whimsicality. I'd see Camp Coffee and think, Are they still making that stuff? They had it in the war. It's made from chicory. It's a nice-looking bottle--almost a museum piece. I'll buy some and tell the boys all about it.Or I'd catch sight of one of those sachets of herbs called bouquet garni and half remember a recipe for stew that involved it. I'd then go looking for the other ingredients, perhaps giving up halfway through, at which point I'd notice that I couldn't fit any more food in my trolley, or that things were starting to fall out of the bloody thing. I'd look at other people's trolleys and see that they were all bigger than mine, and it would dawn on me that I'd taken one of the medium-sized trolleys, one of those designed to be not quite big enough to hold a full weekly shop for a family of four."
As you might guess from the previous excerpt, Martin is British. Fortunately, he's thoughtfully provided a guide for American readers unfamiliar with British terms like trolley (i.e., a shopping cart). Another quintessentially British moment was the extreme politeness Martin advocates when a guest spills red wine on your rug at a party:
"Obviously, the truly correct and gracious thing to do immediately after someone has spilled red wine in your house is to offer them another glass. No guest ought to be left standing around, holding an empty glass and doing their best to apologize while the host pats away at the carpet on hands and knees, saying over and over again, "Ruined . . . absolutely bloody ruined!"
By the way, according to Martin's extensive research, the most effective way to remove a red wine stain from a carpet is to blot it immediately with a paper towel and then to use soda water for the rest.
This book was just a delight to read. I was smiling throughout (except when I was jotting down ideas to help me improve my own housecleaning, which leaves something to be desired). I've got to share a few more excerpts with you that particularly amused me or had me shaking my head in agreement:
"There may well be a lot of stainless steel in your kitchen, for example. This has been fashionable since the 1980s, and gives you kitchen the charm of . . . well, of an operating theater, or perhaps an abattoir."
"Incidentally, I never waste money on buying big eggs, never having heard anybody complain, "These eggs are too small."
The only section that doesn't deal directly with housework is the section on surviving Christmas, which Marin justifies like this:
"Sartre said that hell is other people. Christmas is other people plus housework. It is child care, washing, cleaning, tidying, and cooking with tremendously strong deadline pressure, which is why it merits a chapter here."
This particular chapter had me highlighting passages all over the place. Not to seem like a Grinch or anything, but how apt are these thoughts on the most stressful of holidays?
"... I have often thought that if Christmas could be somehow reclassified, moved from the category of pleasure and put into that of ordeal, then it might paradoxically be more enjoyable. A man ought to regard it as a test of his resourcefulness, diplomacy, tolerance, and advance planning: as a kind of giant time-and-motion problem, the aim being maximal effectiveness for minimal grief."
"The bottom line is that most people couldn't care less whether you send them a Christmas card or not. It took me years to learn this, and I'd become involved in games of psychological "chicken" (except that they were played only on my side): "Ought I to send X a card? He hasn't been in touch for ages. I'll wait and see whether he sends me one. . . ." The day of last Christmas mailing arrives, and still no card from X. . . . "He must have taken against me in a big way. Why? Was it that time that I laughed at his haircut? You can't legislate for spontaneous expression of emotion; he should know that. . . . Anyway, I won't be sending him one ever again." And then the next day, a card arrives from X: "Sorry not to have been in touch this year. I've been laid low with rather a serious illness, but I'm on the mend now. Drink soon? It'd be great to meet up." On these occasions, I used to wish that it was legitimate practice to send what might be called a post-Christmas card, expressing the sentiment: "Sorry I couldn't be bothered to send you a Christmas card, but you've been uppermost in my mind all year."
My Final Recommendation
If you are a woman: My suggestion is to get a copy for yourself, read it, enjoy it, and then regift it to the man in your life with some relevant sections highlighted for his perusal. (Suck him in with the funny parts first before going for the kill.)
If you are a man: My suggestion is to get a copy for yourself, read it and put at least some of the information to work in your household. I pretty much guarantee that the result will be a more relaxed and happy partner who just might be willing to engage in amorous relations with you more often. After all, you're freeing her up by doing the laundry, ironing and grocery shopping now!

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Perfectly pitched to strike some raw nerves: A witty, often surprising manifesto about how and why men should do housework-and a very useful guide for both the millions of men who shirk household duties and the women who live with them

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Uncle John's Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader Review

Uncle John's Ahh-Inspiring Bathroom Reader
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I got this book for Christmas and have literally made unnecessary trips to the restroom just to read some more. It is filled with thousands of pieces of useful and not-so-useful information. For example, did you know that a penny, because of the extra weight on "heads" will come up "heads" just a little more often than "tails"? Some of Cliff Claven's best quotes from Cheers? That the first videogame was created in 1958? How about the legend of Lincoln's ghost at the Whitehouse? There are also articles on the JFK and Priness Diana conspiracies as well. The author is good at not preaching or putting in his own opinions and the info covers the entire gamut from politics, to true crime, funny stories, strange facts and everything else.
OK, time to end this review and get back to reading more of this book. Alright, one more fact, Did you know that until 1965 pennies were legal tender only up to 25cents? A creditor did not have to accepts more than 25 pennies or more than $10 in coins? Crazy huh?

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Flush those boring old gifts and give your friends and family something they can really sit down and digest! The Uncle John's Bathroom Reader series is one of the longest-running, most popular humor collections in the publishing industry. It taps into a vast resource of forgotten readers -- the 66 percent of North Americans who admit to reading in the bathroom. It's our 15th year and we're still going strong!

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The Cleaning Bible: Kim and Aggie's Complete Guide to Modern Household Management Review

The Cleaning Bible: Kim and Aggie's Complete Guide to Modern Household Management
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I love their tv show--and this book! It was amazing to learn how much dirt and bacteria can lurk in an uncleaned house!
The "Cleaning Bible" is full of how-tos for easy cleaning, and recipes for making your own inexpensive, organic, & non-toxic cleaning supplies. I've actually tried lots of their ideas and they've all worked well. The only drawback to the book is the rather inefficient indexing. You have to take the time to familiarize yourself with what's in the book if you hope to be able to find information when you REALLY need it.
This book will become my new standard wedding or housewarming gift for new house-keepers! The Cleaning Bible: Kim and Aggie's Complete Guide to Modern Household Management

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You watched the TV programme and you bought the book but is your house still a bit dull round the edges? It is time to get Kim and Aggie round to do the spring cleaning - their ultimate "Cleaning Bible" is the only helping hand you need for all tasks of a domestic nature. Every tip and trick from their combined cleaning experience of about half a century is included, and they always use natural products where possible so even your conscience will be clean. Make a space next to Delia and Jamie and welcome Kim and Aggie to your domestic bookshelf!

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