my favorite of the re/search books. dan mannix lived the life, and both stories and photos are captivating. perfect format, the perfect resource on they who are not as others.
I love freaks. Really, I do. I'm fascinated by deformities, diseases, special talents--anything that makes someone different. I liked this book because it had lots of anecdotes and personal stories about the little people, the giants, the hirsutes, the malformed twins and everyone else. It was more than just a freak show; it was a peak into their lives. That said, I do wish there had been more pictures.
This is a banned book from the 1970s. It was first published in a small edition format then withdrawn by the publisher and destroyed, after only being out a month. Thus was done under pressure from blue-nosed authoritarian types sticking their noses up about the subject matter. It was out of print for twenty years, until RE-search press, a publisher who specializes in such subject matters, turned out a new edition in 1990. This book is a wonderful collection of material on various sideshow freak events from the lost days of carnivals and circuses. As the author rightly points out, back in the day, a good freak would be the highlight of a show and could pay the running costs of everything by themselves. Before they were shut down by do-gooders in Congress, the sideshow was the best way for a person deemed a “freak” to make a living. Many made fortunes well beyond what they would have made as normal people. Now because of “caring people” who just wanted to help, their livelihoods were destroyed. The book is filled with pictures, some disturbing, some fascinating, and lots of commentary from the author and Anton La Vey (Writer about the Satanic Bible) about historical people deemed to be freaks and the life of an attraction in the modern (modern for 1974) sideshow.
Daniel Mannix has worked as a Sword-swallower and Magician, so his is a first hand account of Sideshow Freaks. Words like Freak and some other descriptors in this book might not be PC these days, but were acceptable in the 1970s, when this book was first published, and banned. Not an academic or professional writer, Mannix has met, interviewed and worked with people in this book, and the best bits are his personal stories from their fascinating lives. Terrific photographs and illustrations bring back this period, when disabled people could make small fortunes exhibiting themselves, and enjoy the friendship of fellow performers, and a chance to see the world. The way in which these giants and little people learned various skills, from musical to sporting, to enhance their performances, is truly heart-warming. I believe they lived happy and fulfilled lives, and some disabled performers, like Sideshow Josh of the Happy Sideshow, continue to make a living this way, to this day. Bravo!
A look at the people who worked the sideshows: pinheads, fat ladies, monkey-women etc. This isn't about titillation or exploitation; rather it's a gentle exploration of people who had to make hard choices to survive.
I actually read the edition that is now out of print, but I bought the RE/Search edition a couple of years ago, just so I could have a copy. Haven't read the whole thing since '98 or thereabouts. What I like about this book is the way it investigates the world of freakshows through interviews and 1st hand accounts. In this sense it's a unique artifact of a world that doesn't really exist anymore.
Loved this book! Wish there was a reference page at the back listing the other memoirs that he mentioned throughout, but they shouldn't be too hard to track down. A more personal look at "freaks" and sideshow performers. If you read a lot in this genre some information will be repeated, but I found that Mannix always added something I hadn't read before.
This was a very informative book, but not well-written (you can tell the author is not a professional writer, in fact, he's a professional carny guy). It is also outdated and some of the terms used to talk about certain folks can seem offensive if you don't take into account that this was written in the mid-seventies. Still, seeing the word "negress" really rubbed me wrong, but perhaps it was the politically correct term for someone from the writer's generation. Anyway, I learned a lot I'd never knew and saw some startling (and sometimes, explicit) photos - Warning! Adult content in some pictures!
The Baby Jesus knows that I love freaks. I really hope to have a little person as a friend one day. I see them occasionally and stare, not because they are freaks, but because I want to call one my friend. They don't seem to mind. I think they are used to getting stares. I wish this book had more pictures.