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heiss93
11th April 2008, 19:15
http://www.trivia-library.com/
One of the best books ever. The Hippie's Encyclopedia Brittanica

The People's Almanac was a series of books published in the 1970s and 1980s by Irving Wallace, the novelist responsible for co-authoring the series The Book of Lists. The format of the almanac departs from a conventional almanac and included many obscure facts, lists and esoteric knowledge. It, as well as the Book of Lists series, is considered a forerunner of Internet websites such as Wikipedia.

The Almanac contained one list that was reprinted in the Book of Lists: the nine breeds of dogs that "bite the most." In order they were: The German shepherd ("police dog"); the chow; the poodle; the Italian bulldog; the fox terrier; the crossed chow, the Airedale; the Pekingese; and the crossed German shepherd. (The authors noted that Dobermans and mongrels did not make the list.)

The Book of Lists refers to any one of a series of books compiled by best selling author Irving Wallace, his son David Wallechinsky, and daughter Amy Wallace.[1][2][3][4] Each book contains hundreds of lists (many accompanied by textual explanations) on unusual or esoteric topics, for example:

* Famous people who died during sex
* The world's greatest libel suits
* People suspected of being the real Jack the Ripper
* Worst places to hitchhike
* People misquoted by Ronald Reagan
* Breeds of dogs which bite people the most, and the least

The first Book of Lists was published in 1977, a second volume came out in 1979 and the third appeared in 1983. Book of Lists for the 1990s, a belated sequel, was published in 1993; yet another volume, The New Book of Lists, was published in 2005. The first volume was initially controversial and banned in some libraries and parts of the United States when it was published due to, among other things, a chapter that graphically described popular sexual positions and their pros and cons.[citation needed]

Wallace and Wallechinsky were also responsible for editing The People's Almanac, which covered similar ground, as well as The Book of Predictions.

Other authors who have followed this basic format include:

* Russ Kick, author of The Disinformation Book of Lists
* Louis Rukeyser, author of Louis Rukeyser's Book Of Lists
* Bernard Schwartz, author of A Book of Legal Lists
* Geoff Tibballs, author of the Best Book Of Lists Ever!

In 2005, a Canadian edition of The Book of Lists was published and credited to Wallechinsky, Amy Wallace, Ira Basen and Jane Farrow. The book contained a mixture of content from the original three volumes, mixed in with updated material, and material with a specifically Canadian focus.