Type of bind: Hardcover
Format: Bargain Price
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 304
Printing Date: November 17, 2005
Sale Popularity Level: 883259
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Product Description:
A fascinating look into the history of the American sideshow and its performers. Learn what's real, what's fake, and what's just downright bizarre.
You've probably heard of Tom Thumb. The Elephant Man. Chang and Eng, the original Siamese twins. But what about Eli Bowen, the legless acrobat? Myrtle Corbin, the four-legged woman? Or Prince Randian, the human torso? All these and more were stars during the heyday of the American sideshow, from 1840 to 1950. American Sideshow chronicles the lives of truly amazing performers, examining these brave and extraordinary curiosities, not just as sideshow attractions, but as people, delving into the lives they led and how they were able to triumph over their abnormalities.
American Sideshow discusses the rise and fall of the original sideshows and their subsequent replacement by today's self-made freaks. With the progress of modern medicine, the physical abnormalities are disappearing, either through treatment or prevention; and, ironically, those same technological advancements now make it possible to change our bodies at will. It's amazing how easy it is to have your tongue forked, horns surgically implanted, or your earlobes removed. There are also modern-day giants, fire-eaters, fire-breathers, sword-swallowers, glass-eaters, human blockheads, and, oh, so much more.
These fascinating personalities are celebrated through intimate biographies paired with stunning photographs. Approximately 200 performers from the past 160 years are featured, giving readers a comprehensive and sometimes astonishing view of the history of the American sideshow.
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Rated by buyers
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This book is well written, full of information on the lives of these unfortunate people and shows them a dignity they deserve.
Rated by buyers
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Here's a classic example of a book that starts promisingly, descends to tedium, and eventually runs completely off the rails. One big problem is that the author never seems to get a focus on what the book is supposed to be about. Is it a history of sideshows, or is it an encyclopedia of sideshow exhibits? Turning to sideshow exhibits, is the focus supposed to be on fairly ordinary people who happen to lie on the extremes of the bell distributions of height or weight, or is it supposed to be about so-called "freaks," people who bravely cope with birth defects often too horrific to contemplate? Most problematic of all, is the book about people turned into sideshow exhibits by genetics or accidents of the gestation process, or is it about strange individuals who deliberately turn themselves into "freaks" by surgery, mutilation and processes such as whole-body tattoos?
True, the sideshows featured magicians side by side with beautiful women born without arms, jugglers side by side with beautiful women born without bones, fire-eaters and contortionists and tattooed ladies side by side with beautiful women who were 15 inches tall or joined to a twin at the hip or sporting a beard two feet long. But there's a big difference!
The author seems particularly fascinated with giants and with fat ladies. The seemingly obsessive inclusion of nearly every tall man and overweight woman exhibited in the US from the 1840s to the present doesn't leave a lot of (or any) room for some of the really strange individuals, nor does it leave much space for discussing anyone... a typical entry is about a page and a half.
This is the type of book which winds up remaindered very quickly... and that's how I found it.
Rated by buyers
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In the Old days the "freaks" didn't have the talk show circuit, they had very few options given to them to make money. If you were born deformed you could either shut yourself up in your house, or join the circus. Back then there wasn't any political correctness, if you had giant growths on your face you were "the ugliest woman", if you weighed over 400 pounds you were the "jolliest fattest person alive" It was all about exploiting your abnormalities to the fullest. It is human nature to be curious about those among us that are different, even shocking in appearance. We try not to stare in public, so when these shows came around it was our opportunity to get an eyeful and not feel guilty. Many times these performers were sold as children by their parents, because it was good money and it got rid of the burden the sideshows became permanent homes for the "orphans". These days disorders and diseases like gigantism, Ichthyosis (alligator skin), even conjoined twins have treatments or solutions for recovery. A lot of the thalidomide babies are grown up and have moved onto normal lives, dwarfism has its own community and they want to be seen as more than an oddity.
This book gives us a rare insight to all the people, big or small, who put themselves on display for entertainment purposes. It's laid out in a certain timeline, with each performer getting a mini biography and a picture; it was fascinating to learn about their origins and what happened to them after the sideshow life. I thought it was interesting that men who were cross dressers were billed as hermaphrodites dressing up one half man one half women, and males who had parasitic twins were made to have that "twin" a female no matter what. Many owners hyped up their performers, blatantly lying to the public to give them more of an exotic feel. Two albino grey men with dreadlocks were Albanian goat men. Even a famous "Chinese" dwarf, was rumored to be a Jewish guy dressed up.
The book is really informative; I was glued to it for days. The only thing I have to complain about has nothing to do with the book itself, but rather the state of "sideshows" today. Now it's mostly about "Human Marvels" or "self made freaks" and less about physical deformities. The Modern section was FULL of tattooed, sword swallowing, pierced, bug eaters. To me that's just not entertaining, if you go and choose to become a "freak" I really don't care about seeing you. I went and saw the Jim Rose Circus when it came through town in the early 90's, and I wasn't impressed by what I saw.
Rated by buyers
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There were some good information and some pictures in this book, however, I felt they covered so many performers that there wasn't enough information about those who were covered. Still a good read.
Rated by buyers
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"The dazzling real lives of the bearded ladies, the dog faced boys, the camel girl, the lobster boy, the frog boy, the lizard man and all the other strange carnival and sideshow performers."
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