Weird and Wonderful chronicles the evolution of the dime museum from its
eighteenth-century inception as a "cabinet of curiosities" to its death
at the hands of new amusement technologies in the early twentieth
century. From curio halls housing upwards of ten thousand exhibits to
meager converted storefronts displaying petrified wood and living
anomalies, this study vividly reanimates the array of museums, exhibits,
and performances that make up this entertainment institution. Tracing
the scattered legacy of the dime museum from vaudeville theatre to
Ripley's museum to the talk show spectacles of today, Dennett makes a
significant contribution to the history of American popular
entertainment.