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L.A. Bizarro: The Insider's Guide to the Obscure, the Absurd, and the Perverse in Los Angeles by Anthony R. Lovett and Matt Maranian. 1997. Non-fiction.
The ultimate L.A. travel guide! Includes addresses, directions, and photographs of some of the most interesting sights you'll see anywhere! Includes everything from the Hollyweird Death Tour to the HardArt Phallic Replicating Service. And this guide is written with humor-- not like most travel guides. An entertaining read whether you are going to L.A. or not!
Beachbum Berry'sGrog Log by Jeff Berry and Annene Kaye. 1998.
Non-fiction. A must-have for Tiki bar and tropical drink lovers. Includes original recipes from bars like Trader Vic's. Packed with Tiki artwork, too.
The Case of the Not-So-Nice Nurse, The Case of the Good-For-Nothing Girlfriend, and A Ghost in the Closet by Mabel Maney. Fiction.
Three books from the Nancy Clue mystery series. If you've ever been a Nancy Drew fan these hilarious spoofs will make you wet yourself. In this series, Nancy Clue and her chums are lesbians that get into wacky situations at nearly every chapter's end. And no matter how hard they try to keep their pristine appearances, someone's hair is bound to get "torn asunder"! In A Ghost in the Closet Nancy Clue and her chums join forces with the Hardly Boys for more hair-mussing adventures!
The Gashleycrumb Tinies by Edward Gorey. 1962. Art/fiction.
Says the inside cover: "an Appalling Alphabet which introduces a Gallery of enchanting tots and produces a Gasp of involuntary mirth when they attain their Dreadful Demises." You'll recognize Gorey's work from the opening segment to the PBS series, Mystery! Each page stands for a letter of the alphabet and says something like, "K is for Kate who was struck with an axe." Then above that is a pen-and-ink drawing of the death of each child. Truly eerie.
The Making of a Cop by Harvey Rachlin. 1991. Non-fiction.
"From raw recruit to police officer--inside the life-and-death world of a rookie." This writer spent months at the New York City Police Academy to bring the reader a day-by-day account of what aspiring cops have to go through. Not for the faint at heart (or stomach.)
Cops: Their Lives in Their Own Words by Mark Baker. 1985. Non-
fiction. If you think being a cop is just about writing speeding tickets and eating doughnuts, think again. You pull a dead baby out of a tree that's been impaled by a tree branch after being thrown from a vehicle in a car accident. Cops lives and this book are not for weak stomachs. See more book reviews at HELL7 I here.
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