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Ohio Oddities: A Guide to the Curious Attractions of the Buckeye State

Ohio Oddities: A Guide to the Curious Attractions of the Buckeye State

Product Type: Book

Product Price: $14.95

Manufacturer: Gray & Company Publishers

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Description

Ohio—a bland and ordinary Midwestern state, right? Ha! You must never get off the highway. The Buckeye State has no shortage of strange, silly, goofy, quirky, eccentric, and just plain weird people, places, and things—if you know where to look.

And no one has looked in more places for Ohio’s oddities than Neil Zurcher, the popular Fox8 TV travel reporter who makes his living on the road seeking out unusual destinations. This book collects the most remarkable things he’s found in and about the Buckeye State, including:

Mysteries. Like the “bottomless” Blue Hole of Castalia and Ashtabula’s famed Headless Chicken—who lived without a noggin for 38 days.

Big things. Like the World’s Largest . . . Crystal Ball . . . Gathering of Twins . . . Easter Basket . . . Cuckoo Clock . . .

Peculiar claims to fame. Like the “Oldest concrete road in America,” the “World’s fastest pumpkin carver.”

Strange collections. Like the Objects Swallowed by Citizens of Lima; the nation’s only vacuum cleaner museum; and the world’s largest collection of popcorn poppers and peanut roasters.

Notable citizens. Like Balto the Wonder dog, cheesemaking firewalker Komar the Magnificent, and Buckeye Chuck, the weather rodent.

And the just-hard-to-explain. Like the Wellington ATM shaped like a Victorian horse and buggy or Ohio’s strange attachment to the bathtub from the U.S.S. Maine.

Reviews

Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2010-04-03
Summary: "Oddities about Ohio"

I was a little disappointed with this book. The seller was great but the book left much to be desired. As a life long resident of this state, many things were left out and some items were just too old to be of any value for this age.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-03-21
Summary: "Excellent Book on Ohio"

This book is entertaining and fun to read. It is not just a boring book of facts. Neil Zurcher adds bits of humor, which makes you want to keep reading on. And the pictures are a nice addition to each curious attraction. This book is a must have for your personl library!


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2007-11-27
Summary: "A Great Book for Enquiring Minds"

Having lived in Ohio for only seven years - being a transplant from Tennessee, I have made it a point to learn as much as possible about my adapted state. In the process I have visited every one of the 88 counties in the Buckeye state and many of them several times over. Being a travel writer, I probably know Ohio better than most natives. So when I picked up "Ohio Oddities" by Neil Zurcher I didn't really expect to learn much that I didn't already know.

How wrong I was. This delightful book is chock full of information which is sure to lead even the most experienced traveler (including the armchair variety) to new discoveries.

People with an inquisitive streak will thoroughly enjoy reading the many interesting tidbits of culture and history that are in "Ohio Oddities." Even after exploring all 88 Ohio counties, more than half of the things chronicled here were new to me. It's an absolute goldmine of information that could only have been written by a man who has spent a lifetime "discovering wonderful little curiosities around the state." Thanks Neil Zurcher, for a fun book which gives me lots of reasons to get out and explore Ohio again.


Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2004-11-09
Summary: "Family pleaser"

We are a family of Ohioans who love this book. I have lived here for several years and never knew there were such interesting things to see and do in a state that I had thought was so boring. Even my 11 year old son who hates to read devoured this book. We plan to search out several of Mr. Zurcher's suggestions next summer!!!!


Rating: 2 / 5
Date: 2004-06-16
Summary: "Like We Didn�t Already Know We Were Odd"

I have a friend who I met while interning in Cleveland who still remembers the first thing I ever said to him: "Did you know the average person eats a pound of bugs a year?" It was one of the many facts I gleaned from Grossology: The Science of Really Gross Things. I can't say that my bug fact was the smoothest ice breaker, but it was clearly memorable.

For some off facts about Ohio, refer to Neil Zurcher's Ohio Oddities.

Sample Facts:

- The First Traffic Light
The first traffic light was invented by some men in Asheville, Ohio. It looked nothing like today, but resembled more of a UFO.

- World's Fastest Pumpkin Carver
Jerry Ayers, from Baltimore, Ohio, can carve a pumpkin in under two minutes. He's even listed in the Guinness Book of World Records.

- Largest Working Model of a Mousetrap
If you ever have a mouse the size of a large man, head to Lisbon, Ohio, to get your hands on a mousetrap that measures about 10 by 4.5 feet.

- Former Home of the Underwear Festival
Remember those red long johns with the flap in the back? They were invented in Piqua, Ohio. In honor of the town's great invention, Dav Pilkey chose it as the setting for his children's series Captain Underpants.

- First Banana Split
Soda Shoppes would not be complete without a banana split on the menu. They have "Doc" Hazard at Hazard's Drug Store in Wilmington, Ohio, to thanks for that invention.

- Birthplace of Clark Gable
Cadiz, Ohio, may not be known for a lot of things, but it I where Clark Gable was born and grew up. You can still go and see the house where he was born.

- Headless Chicken
One of the weirder facts in this book, in Ashtabula, Ohio, a couple cut the head of a chicken to eat it for dinner and the chicken didn't die until a month later. The couple let the headless chicken live in their basement and even fed it, admiring it's will to live.

Ohio Oddities probably isn't a book you will read in one sitting, but guaranteed you'll use facts from the book in conversation. Come on - who doesn't want to hear about a living headless chicken?