Picture of author.

About the Author

After earning an engineering degree at the University of Massachusetts, Tod Benoit spent ten years incarcerated in Corporate America, profoundly disturbed that his biography might someday mirror that of Ivan Ilych's, as told by Leo Tolstoy. In 1997, he redirected his efforts and has since spent his show more days on assorted far-flung adventures, from mountainbiking the Continental Divide to hitchhiking the wilds of South America. For the moment, he's moored in Lyttelton Harbor, New Zealand, aboard the sloop Mauritinia, balancing a tightrope between exhilarating enterprise and financial insolvency show less

Includes the name: Tod Benoit

Works by Tod Benoit

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1965
Gender
male
Occupations
businessman
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Fiskdale, Massachusetts, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Massachusetts, USA

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
An amusing read it as I think somebody noted good for the short periods you may be spending with the book in your home. I suppose the factors that held me back from giving more stars are the authors periodic commentary about some of his deceased subjects. For example when talking about Lee Harvey Oswald he says clearly the forensic evidence could not support Oswald as the single gunman. To have the author interject their own opinions detract from the flow of the book and is an annoying show more distraction. When talking about Bella Lugosi he throws in the comment that a wooden stake or silver bullet wasn’t necessary after all. Some of the comments are sometimes entertaining but mostly they fall flat. show less
PUBLISHED IN 2003 COPY. (I guess there's a 2019 copy) The author researched deaths, found graveside locations, & then added his own 2 cents about famous peoples deaths. It was kind of like reading an entertainment magazine. Some good info on the famous deceased and backstory on feuding, etc. I didn't care for the authors opinion & speculation he added into a lot of the research. He wasn't around in 1867-1959 so adding his own gossip about the deceased was a turn off. The end of the book has show more a chapter entitled "How To Find Where Someone is Buried" which basically gives you instruction on how to lie to funeral or cemetery personnel so they'll give out famous people's plot numbers. For example, inquiring about your dear great aunt Mrs. Grace Allen (George Burn's wife) to find out where George is buried since their plots are next to each other or asking where Leonard Oswold who died in the 60's plot is & the clerk saying they have a Lee Oswold (bingo, now you know where the assassin is buried) A little underhanded & lurid. show less
This was a great read! The author's travels and investigations are interesting to read. I think my overwhelming impression was "Wow, a whole lot of well-known folks have died since I was born!" Somehow, that's a weird feeling. Another book on the shelf that my family will browse through on occasion and enjoy.

You May Also Like

Statistics

Works
4
Members
413
Popularity
#58,990
Rating
3.8
Reviews
5
ISBNs
16

Charts & Graphs