Dubious Facts


Book Description

What were the intentions of early China's historians? Modern readers must contend with the tension between the narrators' moralizing commentary and their description of events. Although these historians had notions of evidence, it is not clear to what extent they valued what contemporary scholars would deem "hard" facts. Offering an innovative approach to premodern historical documents, Garret P. S. Olberding argues that the speeches of court advisors reveal subtle strategies of information management in the early monarchic context. Olberding focuses on those addresses concerning military campaigns where evidence would be important in guiding immediate social and political policy. His analysis reveals the sophisticated conventions that governed the imperial advisor's logic and suasion in critical state discussions, which were specifically intended to counter anticipated doubts. Dubious Facts illuminates both the decision-making processes that informed early Chinese military campaigns and the historical records that represent them.




Weird But True! 4


Book Description

"300 more mind-bending facts that are almost too amazing to believe"--Page 4 of cover.




Weird But True! 6


Book Description

Offers a collection of true facts about animals, food, science, pop culture, outer space, geography, and weather.




Weird-But-True Facts about U. S. History


Book Description

This book is full of weird facts that are amazing, gross, creepy, astonishing--but true!




Weird But True


Book Description




Random Illustrated Facts


Book Description

Trivia meets its match. Did you know that Napoleon was once attacked by rabbits? Or that the Mars Rover sang itself “Happy Birthday”? How about the odd ingredient Civil War soldiers used to make coffee? From Jupiter’s diamond showers to why pirates wore eye patches to the delightful link between dancing goats and the discovery of coffee, this collection of obscure and fascinating facts is brought to you by Mike Lowery, an illustrator and connoisseur of the offbeat. Featuring four gatefolds and hundreds of infographic webs that connect the trivia in dozens of surprising ways, it’s a little book that delivers endless delight.




Weird-But-True Facts about Gross Things


Book Description

This book offers all kinds of weird facts that are amazing, unexpected, gross, creepy and astonishing--but true!




Dubious Knowledge: Doubtful Facts, Twisted History and Other Humorosities:


Book Description

If you like learning with a lively dose of laughter, you'll love this hilarious book full of fishy facts, twisted history and general "Dubious Knowledge" from award-winning humor columnist Dan Van Oss.Collected from more of his weekly "Dubious Knowledge Institute" humor column, these 34 side-splitting features will keep you laughing while you learn about:Coffee: "In Japan, coffee shops are called Kissaten, which means, 'Place to continually work on my first novel.'"St. Patrick's Day: "According to Irish lore, Saint Patrick is credited with driving all of the snakes out of Ireland, although the International Snake Society insists they just simply don't like Irishmen."Smokey Bear: "Smokey celebrated his 70th birthday in 2014 although, due to an ill-advised use of birthday candles, he smashed his cake flat with his shovel."Valentine's Day: "In Wales, people celebrate Valentine's Day as 'Dydd Santes Dwynwen Day', commemorating St. Dwynwen, the patron saint of consonants."Niagara Falls: "The Niagara River is not a 'river,' it is a 'strait,' according to the same people that correct you when you say 'good' instead of 'well.'"Melding the laugh-out-loud wit of classic humor columnist Dave Barry with the British quirkiness of Douglas Adams and Monty Python, Dan expertly melds fact and fiction into a zany mixture of learning and laughter.




Weird But True! 1


Book Description

Offers a collection of facts about animals, food, science, pop culture, outer space, geography, and weather.




Weird-o-Pedia


Book Description

Check out the weird and wonderful facts in this massive encyclopedia of alphabetized oddities: HUMANS ARE THE ONLY ANIMALS THAT ENJOY SPICY FOOD (there’s a reason no one sells Tabasco-flavored cat food). NAPPING CAN SAVE YOU FROM A HEART ATTACK (assuming you are not operating heavy machinery at the time). PSYCHOLOGISTS CAN ASSESS YOUR PERSONALITY FROM HOW YOU DIP FRIES IN KETCHUP (nice fries, sociopath). SURFING THE INTERNET ACTUALLY MAKES YOU SMARTER (but not as smart as reading this book will). Now the next time someone tells you smugly that Pluto isn’t a planet, you can counter with any one of these hundreds of weird facts and remain king or queen of the cocktail (or kegger) chatter.