Best rural life humor books according to redditors

We found 11 Reddit comments discussing the best rural life humor books. We ranked the 7 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top Reddit comments about Rural Life Humor:

u/snow_michael · 83 pointsr/todayilearned
u/ryguy2503 · 4 pointsr/politics
u/moge · 2 pointsr/farming

Forrest Pritchard's Gaining Ground is just about to be released you can pre-order it now.

note: I am an apprentice for Forrest but I have read the book and it is an amazing read. It covers a lot of his early mistakes and talks about how to make a go at being a profitable organic farmer.

u/JerryLikesTolkien · 1 pointr/tolkienfans

You could do a lot worse than cover designs based on Tolkien's own artwork. This art is based on JRRT's original cover designs.

u/MisanthropicScott · 1 pointr/misanthropy

> "they're not as smart as us."

There's probably some truth to that part of the statement in most cases, using the human definition of smarts of course.

But, I think we tend to overestimate our own intelligence and underestimate the intelligence of other species. I think even in cases where you'd expect an enormous gap in intelligence, it's always smaller than we expect.

Did you know they've identified at least 10 different calls of prairie dogs? Prairie dogs!

These are large ground squirrels. They're rodents. But, they have a different call for human and human with gun! And, when they tested this, a guy walked by the prairie dog colony with a gun. They, of course, correctly gave the alarm call for "human with gun". They're never wrong about that.

More interestingly, when he went by some days later without the gun, they recognized a specific individual of another species and again gave the call "human with gun"!

There are so many great examples of animal intelligence both in formal research and in anecdotal observed cases such as The Parrot's Lament, which is the title story in a book of anecdotal stories of animal intelligence. It was written as a statement that we need to investigate this more, not as if anecdotes count as scientific evidence.

u/AnalogHumanSentient · 1 pointr/worldnews

Its good to see animal rights coming to the forefront. I have a blue and gold macaw, today is his 8th birthday, and he has as much a soul as anyone I've ever met. I believe all animals are just as intelligent as us, but in such specialized ways we cannot understand the perspective and write it off as "dumb animal". When you truly connect and communicate with an animal, it is an enlightening and powerful experience.

My parrot, raised out of his cage and with me or my wife all day, is like a 3 year old little boy. He has trouble communicating with us at times, gets frustrated, throws tantrums when he doesn't get what he wants, loves and snuggles on us all the time.

If you are intrigued by animal intelligence, read the book " The Parrots Lament", it has fascinating stories about an orangutan that's an honorary member of the locksmiths guild from an ingenious breakout of his complicated cage.
Link to the book: http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/0452280680?pc_redir=1404663993&robot_redir=1

u/flahertypj · 1 pointr/farming

You might want to check out Gaining Ground by Forrest Pritchard to learn what it takes to handle a cattle farm & try to be profitable.

u/Argy · 1 pointr/IAmA

I'm asking as someone who was a fan of Colbert before he became super-famous. I actually don't watch the Colbert Report (time issues/no cable), but "Strangers with Candy" remains my favorite TV show. He also collaborated with Sedaris and Dinello on a book called "Wigfield."

u/En-Zu · 1 pointr/TrollXChromosomes

There is an element of risk of personal injury + skill + low success rate involved that would have made it exciting and allowed it to be an activity that could determine social standing and would have given successful males a leg up in survival fitness.

I recommend this book for a more anthropological look at contemporary hunter gatherer societies that may (extra emphasis on "may") inform us about paleolithic hunter gathering: https://www.amazon.com/Women-Like-Meat-Folklore-Foraging/dp/1868142124