(Part 2) Best products from r/xkcd

We found 21 comments on r/xkcd discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 42 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Top comments mentioning products on r/xkcd:

u/BlueVerse · 24 pointsr/xkcd

Also: How many of these do we have to buy to make it a 'frequently bought together' selection for the book??

And more importantly, would it come in the same box?

u/seanmg · 5 pointsr/xkcd

It's discussed quite a bit in this book.

He doesn't specifically address the shopkeeper, but the peeing in clam chowder is for sure discussed. And I believe the soap stuff is discussed. I haven't read the book in a couple of years.

u/alosec_ · 1 pointr/xkcd

I can help with the dying/reaching up one. During death, the psycho-active drug known as 'DMT' is released from the pineal gland into the person's bloodstream. In Rick Strassman's studies of the drug, patients were given a 'hit' of the drug, purely to test how their bodies and minds would react. It was extremely common for that person to reach out for the other people in the room, both the doc in the room and the nurse(s).

Could be related, not sure. Check out the book if you're interested: http://www.amazon.com/DMT-Molecule-Revolutionary-Near-Death-Experiences/dp/0892819278

u/Subbota · 1 pointr/xkcd

Randall needs to get together with R.A. Wilson and publish an updated and illustrated edition of Everything is Under Control.

u/infracanis · 2 pointsr/xkcd

You should read the book FOOP!

u/thusiasm · 8 pointsr/xkcd

Infinite Jest is the only book I have read where the footnotes have footnotes.

u/Werchio · 3 pointsr/xkcd

Sorry that I ask, but after seeing tons of these posts recently, is it this book that pictures are from?

u/lanzkron · 6 pointsr/xkcd

I was first introduced to the Orion concept in Footfall over 15 years ago and it has stuck in my mind since.

u/Kirby_O · 53 pointsr/xkcd

I believe that's a comic from the book "Man, I Hate Cursive: Cartoons for People and Advanced Bears" by Jim Benton.
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