Very Special People

by Frederick Drimmer

Hardcover, 1973

Status

Available

Call number

GV1835.D74

Publication

Amjon Publishers (1973), Edition: Fifth Printing

User reviews

LibraryThing member opinion8dsngr
This very usual book documents the lives of famous human oddities, seeking to transform their image from that of "freaks" in a sideshow to that of individual human beings who are making the best of their handicaps (or occasionally- as in the case of the three-legged man, gifts). With chapter titled
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things such as "Little People" for famous dwarfs and "Hairy People" for bearded women the book conveys a light-heated look at an interesting chapter in human history. The book does have some problems. It is a little candy coated, rather happily blazing through exploitation of various types, slavery, and depression with a sort of slightly-saddened smile. Somehow Barnum comes off as a simultaneously being a saint and a shyster and all of the VSP are shown as being sort of jolly, even if evidence says that they weren't.
Still, the book was a landmark and is the only I've encountered that humanely covers such a wide variety of VSP. With a plea for kindness on the first page, the book does take a muddle of myth, fact, exaggeration, and truth that is hard to believe and craft a novel out of it. The medical aspects and some of the vocabulary is dated; but the book is still a very interesting and worthwhile read.
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LibraryThing member extrajoker
Here's another of several books in my library on the subject of real-life persons with unusual anatomical variations: conjoined twins, dwarfs, pituitary giants, hypertrichosics, Proteus syndrome sufferers, microcephalics, &c. Drimmer's writing style didn't much appeal to me, and most of the
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material (on both the lives and conditions of various people) was familiar to me. However, Very Special People offers more in-depth detail on certain historical individuals than I've read elsewhere, as well as a generous black-and-white photo section at the beginning of the book.
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LibraryThing member burritapal
Really minimal effort was put into this book about deformed humans, or humans with some kind of difference that makes them a curiosity. One used to be able to pay money and stare at them. Now that happens in zoos.

Language

Original publication date

1973
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