You can never come up with enough fake titles. Someone has even created a fake title generator. (Here's what I got from the site: Oppressing, Representing, Protesting: Sexuality in George Orwell and the Cultural Ego of Relic in Animal Farm.) So, once again, here are a few fake titles in religious studies and American religious history. (I like to get some ideas from journal titles found on Project Muse.)

White Elephant Gifts of the Spirit: TV Preachers in the 1990s
The Prevangelicals: Pietists, Preachers, and Divinity Pedlars in the Early Modern West
Local Weathermen and the Pornotropics of Doppler Iconography in Cleveland, Ohio, 1997-1999
"Broadminded is spelled s-i-n": The Theology of the Louvin Brothers
Stand Up and Shout It: Bible Quizzing, Performativity, the Politics of Affective Agency, and {Em}bodiment
Whorehouse Faith: The Lived Religion of the Painted Ladies of Chicago's Little Hell, 1880-1906
On the Road Again: Hobo Graphotheologies from Bangor, Maine, to Cave Creek, Arizona, 1929-1950
Raise Your Paws and Praise Him: Dogs at Worship and in Community
The Legend of the Great Salt Lake Mormon Merman, 1890-1902
Planet of the Apes, the Twilight of Scientism, and Dystopian Premillennial Predilections
Tinseltown Preacher Cowboys, Shirtless Suburban Gurus, and Hippie Pretindians of the Southwest: Baby Boomers working off Script during their Religious Quests, 1966-1973