Strange, weird, wonderful and unusual reference books

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#1
I was pleased and intrigued to find out Sir Terry collected Victorian reference texts, but now I know where he's picked up some "local color" for his books. :) Although I've only found references to a handful of the many titles he's collected, I too have been known to pick up the odd reference book over the years. I thought it might be interesting to start a thread about the unusual titles I've come across and give others the opportunity to do the same. To be fair, mine aren't just limited to the 19th century.

I've had Collier's Cyclopedia of Social and Commercial Information since high school. It has articles on such topics as: Bookkeeping, Riding a Bicycle, How to Swim, and Drowning, to name a few.
At one of the used book stores I haunt, I ran into a title called We Japanese. My edition was printed in 1951. It was written for the Fujiya Hotel as a guide to Japanese culture and is formatted much like an encyclopedia to give a general overview of things like art, holidays, ceremonies, etc. The formatting and print are very evocative of a 19th century format, though.
A few more titles from my modest collection:
The Century Cyclopedia of Names in three volumes
Pseudonyms of Authors; including Anonyms and Initialisms
The Reader's Encyclopedia
Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable

edited for grammar
 

RathDarkblade

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#2
Naturally I have Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable... Centenary Impression (1970).

The Cambridge Historical Encyclopedia of Great Britain and Ireland (1985).

Breverton's Nautical Curiosities

Lost English: Words and Phrases that have Vanished from Our Language

Under the Covers and Between the Sheets: the inside story behind classic characters, authors, unforgettable phrases, and unexpected endings

The Shakespeare Miscellany

Lobcocks and Fartleberries: 18th Century Insults to Confound your Foes

The Vulgar Tongue: Buckish Slang and Pickpocket Eloquence

A Medieval Home Companion (written by a 15th-century merchant, translated by a 20th-century Lady) :twisted:

...and many others too, but the others are reference books concerning history, so I'm not sure if they're relevant here... :shifty:
 
#3
...and many others too, but the others are reference books concerning history, so I'm not sure if they're relevant here... :shifty:
I don't know, I'm apt to be over generous. I just found a great ad that in an early 20th century cookbook. It gave me an idea for hook I need for my holiday Discworld campaign I'm planning. And I'm thinking the Japan guide I mentioned earlier might assist if I decide to do anything with the Agatean empire. So maybe we should expand the thread to include anything relevant, including ephemera.

I will emphasize that strange and interesting are the keywords here.

I also remember a text I had from the International Correspondence School on merchandise displays from the early 1900s. Fabulous stuff, including whole windows of intricately arranged socks. So many possibilities.

The handful of references I've found from Sir Terry's own collection include:
Mayhew's London Labour and the Poor (apparently there is a reference to Mayhew's work in the books)
London, Then and Now
A dictionary of slang in two volumes.
Brewer's dictionary

The best part is that many of these are now available online through google books and the Internet Archive. Gutenberg can be a bit hit and miss with these things, but google and the IA are goldmines, truly.

I so need that book on 18th century insults. Mrs. Fartleberry would be a great name for an NPC! :laugh:

edited for grammar
 

=Tamar

Lieutenant
May 20, 2012
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#4
The Amber Book by Ake Dahlstrom
Fighting Words: Writers Lambast Other Writers from Aristotle to Anne Rice, edited by James Charlton
Dr. Chase's Recipes, 1862 edition (for entertainment only!)
The Anti-Gravity Handbook, compiled by D. Hatcher Childress
 

RathDarkblade

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Mar 24, 2015
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#5
Aw, geeze. You'd like the full range of my reference books. then? *cracks knuckles* All right, here we go...! :laugh:

Lost States / Trinklein

Rack, Rope and Red Hot Pincers / Gefforey Abbott

The Real History of the Cold War / Alan Axelrod

Struggle for a Vast Future - Ed. Aaron Sheehan-Dean

Knight: The Medieval Warrior's Unofficial Manual / Michael Prestwich

Gladiator: The Medieval Warrior's Unofficial Manual / Philip Matyszak

Legionary: The Medieval Soldier's Unofficial Manual / Philip Matyszak

The Enemies of Rome / Philip Matyszak

The Chronicle of the Roman Republic / Philip Matyszak (do you see a theme here?) ;)

Samurai: The Japanese Warrior's Unofficial Manual / Stephen Turnbull

Viking: The Norse Warrior's Unofficial Manual / John Haywood

Byzantium: A History, v. 1, 2 and 3 / John Julius Norwich

Working IX to V: Jobs in the Ancient World / Vicki Leon

The Man Who Ate Bluebottles / Catherine Caufield

Anything for a Vote: A Guide to the American Elections / Joseph Cummins

Great Stagecoach Robberies of the Old West / R. Michael Wilson

Great Train Robberies of the Old West / R. Michael Wilson

Myths and Mysteries of the Civil War / Michael R. Bradley

Secret Britain / Justin Pollard

The Interesting Bits: The History You Might Have Missed / Justin Pollard

Charge! The Interesting Bits of Military History / Justin Pollard

Legends and Lies of the American West / Dale L. Walker

London's Strangest Tales / Tom Quinn

Fat, Bald and Worthless: The Curious Stories Behind Noble Nicknames / Rev'd Robert Easton

Cave Canem: A Miscellany of Latin Words & Phrases / Lorna Robinson

Say It In Latin! / edited by Eugene Ehrlich

Bartlett's Book of Anecdotes, Revised Edition

The Time Traveller's Guide to Elizabethan England / Ian Mortimer

The Time Traveller's Guide to Medieval England / Ian Mortimer

Crown & Country / David Starkey

Absolute Monarchs: A History of the Papacy / John Julius Norwich

Music and Monarchy / David Starkey and Katie Greening

Historical Enigmas / Hugh Ross Williamson

1000 Years of Annoying the French / Stephen Clarke

A Cabinet of Greek Curiousities / McKeown

Cities of the Classical World: An Atlas and Gazeteer / Edited by Douglas S. Oles

Eureka! Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about the Ancient Greeks but were Afraid to Ask / Peter Jones

Veni, Vidi, Vici: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about the Romans but were Afraid to Ask / Peter Jones

Fascinating Footnotes from History / John Murray

Enquire Within Upon Everything, 84th edition, Revised (Published Paternoster Square, London, 1891) - a book about how to keep a home in the late 19th century

The Burglar Caught by a Skeleton / Jeremy Clay

How to Insult, Abuse and Insinuate in Classical Latin / Michelle Lovric and Nikiforos Doxiadis Mardas

The Elements of Eloquence / Mark Forsyth

The Etymologicon / Mark Forsyth

The Horologicon / Mark Forsyth

.................aaaaaaaaand that's just the pick of one bookcase - I have loads more on it. I have another one in the other room, but I'm afraid of what I may find there... ;)
 
#6
after cracking the knuckles that belong to my hands:

A Dictionary of Literary Characters and Authors in two volumes.
The Reader's Encyclopedia
National Geographic, Jan-Dec 1920 in two bound volumes.
Fairytales of Ireland, a compilation of tales of the fairy folk gathered by none other than W.B. Yeats
Meetings with the Other Crowd, another collection of orally collected fairy lore from Ireland by Eddie Lenihan
Mystery of the Buried Crosses, an account of Hamlin Garland's experience with spiritualism (interesting because Hamlin actually spent some time debunking spiritualists)
People from the Other Side by Henry Steel Olcott, another account of spiritualism. Olcott himself is a very interesting guy. He was part of the investigation into Lincoln's assassination and converted to Buddhism.
All Manners of Food, Stephen Mennell (a history of food from the Middle Ages to the present)
A couple of lexicons and dictionaries on Lovecraft's work.
America Illustrated, a 19th century guide to the more scenic parts of the country
 

RathDarkblade

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#7
All right, I've had a look now at my other bookcase, and.......

The Real History of the American Revolution / Alan Axelrod

The Real History of the American Civil War / Alan Axelrod

Great Tales from English History, v. 1, 2 and 3 / Robert Lacey (one of my favourite books)

Experience of War / ed. Robert Cowley

The Collected What If? / ed. Robert Cowley (from MHQ, the Quarterly Journal of Military History)

What If? America / ed. Robert Cowley

History without the Boring Bits / Ian Crofton

Scottish History without the Boring Bits / Ian Crofton

Breverton's Phantasmagoria / Terry Breverton

An Incomplete History of World War I / Edwin Keister, Jr.

An Incomplete History of World War II / Edwin Keister, Jr.

Phillip Matyszak's Classical Compendium / Phillip Matyszak, (obviously ;))

Curing Hiccups with Small Fires / Karl Shaw

Historionics: A treasury of historical anecdotes / Geoffrey Regan

Battles that Changed History / Geoffrey Regan

Historical Blunders / Geoffrey Regan

Military Blunders / Geoffrey Regan

Royal Blunders / Geoffrey Regan

More Military Blunders / Geoffrey Regan

Air Force Blunders / Geoffrey Regan

Naval Blunders / Geoffrey Regan (you get the idea that I like this author? ;))

Today's the Day! / Jeremy Beadle

Centuries of Change: Which century saw the most change and why it matters to us / Ian Mortimer

Whisper of the Blade: Revolutions, Mayhem, Betrayal, Glory and Death / Erik Durschmied

The Hinge Factor: how chance and stupidity have changed history / Erik Durschmied

The Weather Factor: how nature had changed history / Erik Durschmied

Whores of the Devil: A history of witch-hunts and witch-trials / Erik Durschmied

The hinges of battle: how chance and incompetence have changed history / Erik Durschmied

Unsung Heroes: the twentieth century's forgotten history makers / Erik Durschmied

From Armageddon to the Fall of Rome: how the Ancient Warlords changed the world / Erik Durschmied

*looks at above list* Gee, I'm a nerd... :geek: :p :mrgreen:

 
#9
Seems to me to depend on how you define a 'reference' work . . . throws down mitten :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:

American Practical Navigator: An Epitome of Navigation (known in the profession as 'Bowditch')
Chart No. 1 United States of America Nautical Chart Symbols Abbreviations and Terms
US Coast Guard Navigation Rules International - Inland
Chapman Piloting Seamanship and Small Boat Handling
A Sailor's History of the US Navy
Nelson's Navy
The Tug Book
Maryland A to Z
Report of the 1967 Constitutional Convention Committee of Maryland
Threatened and Endangered Pants and Animals of Maryland
Life in the Chesapeake Bay
Fishes of the Chesapeake Bay
Maryland Manual
The American Oyster
Manual of Vascular Plants
Poisonous Plants of the United States
Fishes of the Southeastern United States
The Illustrated Natural History of Selbourne
Atlas of the Breeding Birds of Maryland and the District of Columbia
The World Encyclopedia of Film
World Theatre in Pictures
A Pictorial History of the American Theatre 1860-1970
An Atlas of American Wars
Collier's Photographic History of World War II
Wicked Words
A Classic Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue
The Devil's Dictionary
Sailing Terms
Monty Python's Flying Circus All the Words vols. 1 & 2
A Tolkien Bestiary
Great Disasters
Life in a Medieval Castle
Daily Life in Ancient Rome
Bent's Life Histories of North American Birds (many volumes too numerous to list)
The Roman Imperial Army

I'll stop now. ;)
 

RathDarkblade

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#11
Seems that a lot of your books are about Massachusetts, phalarope... not surprising, I'm sure, since you live there! ;)

phalarope said:
Monty Python's Flying Circus All the Words vols. 1 & 2
Yeah! I have the Complete Unexpurgated Scripts of the Original TV series! *gives phalarope a high-five* :laugh:

That reminds me. I also own a history of the Yom Kippur War (1973), written just a year after the war, and containing many original (black-and-white) photographs of the soldiers at war, as well as copies of the daily directives and pep talks issued to the Israeli Defence Force soldiers. It's one of the things I inherited from my grandmother. Bound in suede. Written in Hebrew, but with translations in English, French and Russian. Probably worth a mint to a collector, if I ever decide to sell. :mrgreen:

Once again: gee, I'm a nerd... :p :twisted:
 
#12
RathDarkblade said:
Seems that a lot of your books are about Massachusetts, phalarope... not surprising, I'm sure, since you live there! ;)
That would be Maryland, Rath, ;) the Land of Pleasant Living named for Queen Henrietta Maria - not that northern Yankee hotbed of witch trials. :p MD, not MA. And we have the coolest flag of all the 50 states. Not that I'm biased at all... :snooty:

Always glad to know another Pythonite - I've got several additional Python reference works, and I'm working on the filmography as hard as I can. :geek:
 
#13
I also have:

The Gulag Archipelago
The Language of Flowers
The Oxford Anthology of English Literature, Vol. 1
A handful of Dictionaries on symbols.

And the free books I've gathered from google books:

The New Memphremagog Cookbook (I love that name)
The Encyclopaedia Britannica
Glossop's Street Guide, Stranger's Directory and Hotel Manual of Chicago
Mammoth Cave of Kentucy
Encyclopaedia of Occultism
Curious Myths of the Middle Ages
Eaglehawk and Crow (anthology about Australia)
The Reader's Handbook of Allusions, References, Plots, and Stories
Demonology and Devil Lore
Strange Sights Abroad
A couple of books on commercial telegraph codes
Trademan's Tokens
History Marion County, Iowa
Unknown London

On the kindle:
The Works of Sir Thomas Browne
Connections (I have almost everything James Burke has written)
Six Walks in the Fictional Woods
Alice in Quantum Land
Vintage Spirits and Forgotten Cocktails
Numerous Delphi Collections of authors in the public domain
too many books of Victorian ghost stories and world folk tales to list
 

=Tamar

Lieutenant
May 20, 2012
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#14
How to Drive In Boston (includes when you can safely park in the space under City Hall reserved for the Mayor)
The Tough Guide to Fantasyland, by Diana Wynne Jones
 
Nov 15, 2011
3,310
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#15
Cor, you guys aren't mucking about are you.

One I have is The Encyclopaedia Of Things That Never Were by Robert Ingpen & Michael Page. I always enjoy having a read through that one.
 

Quatermass

Sergeant-at-Arms
Dec 7, 2010
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#16
In terms of odd reference books, here's a small sampling of mine...

Wiped! Doctor Who's Missing Episodes by Richard Molesworthy

Now on the Big Screen! The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to Doctor Who at the Movies by Charles Norton

X-Treme Latin by Henry Beard

Forensic Medicine by Keith Simpson

The Fat Duck Cookbook by Heston Blumenthal

Court in the Act: Humorous Moments from Australian Courts by Beverley Tait

Black Holes and Time Warps by Kip S Thorne

Super Mario: How Nintendo Conquered America by Jeff Ryan

Of Dice and Men: The Story of Dungeons and Dragons and the People Who Play It by David M Ewalt

Oh, and I've got a lot of Dr Karl Kruszelnicki's books.
 

Mixa

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Jan 1, 2014
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#19
I take my hat off, guys! That’s an amazing display of titles! I’m not sure if I could win you but my mother has got LOTS of strange and wonderful books (and dozens of encyclopaedias). :whistle:

RedQueen said:
Ah...you win. :laugh:

Oh! Loved the song RedQueen! :laugh:

Mx
 

The Mad Collector

Sergeant-at-Arms
Sep 1, 2010
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www.bearsonthesquare.com
#20
Hmm,

Well I can't be bothered to leave my living room to check the books in the library or the other rooms in the house so just in here let's see:

The Domesday Book - Complete translation of the tax census for England in 1089

A History of the Anglo Saxons in 3 surprisingly large volumes

Buildings of England a county by county reference of notable buildings (I have 23 volumes from this set)

Buildings of Scotland a county by county reference of notable buildings (I have 2 volumes from this set)

Buildings of Wales a county by county reference of notable buildings (I have 3 volumes from this set)

The Oxford directory of Word Origins

The Oxford English Grammar

Chambers Biographical Dictionary 5th edition

Brewers Myth and Legends

Brewers Dictionary of Phrase and Fable - Millennium edition - foreword by Terry Pratchett

Brewers Dictionary of Phrase and Fable - 18th edition - foreword by Philip Pullman

Map of a Nation - The development of Ordnance Survey maps of the UK

The Penguin Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture

The Penguin Dictionary of Modern Humorous Quotations

English Place Names a dictionary of derivations

Redoute's Roses - A guide to the prints

American Indian Myths and Legends

The Babylonians - HWF Jacobs

The Hittites - OM Gerney

The Egyptians - Alan Gardner

The Persians - JM Cook

Fauna Britannica - An encyclopedia of British wildlife

Old Cheshire Churches - Raymond Richards

Nantwich a history - Hall

An Outline of European Architecture - Deluxe edition

The Oxford dictionary of humorous quotations

The Oxford dictionary of quotations

The Oxford illustrated history of English

Lost Treasures of Britain - Roy Strong

The Immortals - a guide to London's finest statues

The Oxford Dictionary of proverbs

Cidermaking - Michael Quinton

Toy Soldiers - James Opie

Toy Steam Engines - Bob Gordon

Picture Postcards - CW Hill

Optical Toys - Basil Harley

Airships - Patrick Abbott

Mazes - Adrian Fisher

Johnsons Directory - A street guide to Nantwich including the names of all the residents - 26 of the annual volumes produced between 1939 and 1976

Folio 50 - A list of all the books produced by the Folio Society in it's first 50 years

Folio 60 - Yes you guessed it - a list of all the books produced by the Folio Society in it's first 60 years

Merrythought Teddy Bears

Farnell Teddy Bears

British Dolls of the 1950's

British Dolls of the 1960's

Islam: Art and Architecture

Libya - A study of the ancient Greek and Roman ruins

Dali - The Paintings

The Synonym Finder - to be honest a not very good thesaurus

Islam: Early architecture from Baghdad to Cordoba

Egyptian architecture from prehistory to The Romans

Pertelote - A list of books printed by The Golden Cockerel Press between October 1936 and April 1943

Venereal Disease in Britain - Major Sidney Laird

The Penguin dictionary of Computing - 1979 edition it's hilarious

The Oxford History of England - all 17 volumes

The Oxford History of English literature - 4 volumes

The Minoans - J Lesley Fitton

The Myceneans - Chadwick

The Incas - Nigel Davies

The Maya - Norman Hammond

British Butterflies - Books 1 and 2

British Moths - Books 1 and 2

Discovering Antique Maps - Hodgkiss

Collins Latin Dictionary

Romanesque architecture

The Penguin dictionary of Classical myths

Angkor - An archaeological study of the Cambodian temple complexes

The Oxford Guide to English usage

Architecture of Greece from Mycenea to the Parthanon

Architecture of the Early Middle Ages

Cathedrals of England - Thames and Hudson

Birmingham its notable buildings

High Gothic - architecture of the great cathedrals

There are more in here but I'm sure you are getting as bored reading the list as I am typing it. There are well over 3,000 more books in the house that I haven't even looked at in making this list and a significant proportion are reference works including such stunners as

The Intelligent Woman's guide to Socialism, Capitalism, Sovietism and Facsism in 2 volumes

A History of the English People in 1815 in 6 volumes

Social Life in the Insect World

After the Deluge - A study of communal psychology

Psychopathology of Everyday Life

Totem and Taboo - Resemblances Between the Psychic Lives of Savages and Neurotics

Working-Class Wives Their Health and Conditions. Being the survey of the conditions of 1,250 married working women, based on
information collected by the Women's Health Enquiry Committee. 

Lives of the Great Composers in 3 volumes

Soviet Science in the 1930's

Growing up in New Guinea A Study of Adolescence and Sex in Primitive Societies 

Ballet - A Complete Guide to Appreciation, History, Aesthetics, Ballets, Dancers

Coming of Age in Samoa A Study of Adolescence and Sex in Primitive Societies

Interglossa A draft of an auxilliary for a democratic world order, being an attempt to apply semantic principles to language design 

Common wild flowers

British Freshwater Fishes

Glass Through The Ages 

Bird Recognition in 3 volumes

British herbs

Animals Without Backbones An Introduction to the Invertebrates in 2 volumes

A Hundred years of Photography 1839-1939

British Agriculture - The Principles of Future Policy: A Report of an Inquiry (printed in 1940) 

The Government Blue Book (On outbreak of World War II) 

Warships at Work A naval notebook explaining in Text and by profile some Functions of the Principal Warship Types of the World.

The Penguin Political atlas

Food - The Deciding Factor A Guide to Rationing and Food Values (printed in 1941)

Signalling and Map-Reading for the Home Guard With Advice on Improvising Equipment (printed in 1942)

Keeping Poultry and Rabbits on Scraps

A Dictionary of Science definitions and Explanations of Terms Used in Chemistry, Physics and Elementary Mathematics

People in Production An Enquiry into British War Production. A Report Prepared by Mass Observation for the Advertising Service Guild. 

Wartime 'Good Housekeeping' Cookery Book 

A Plan of Economic Development for India (printed in 1944)

etc.
 

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