Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Linda
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Apr 29, 2009 09:29PM

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Nick Hornby is funny. Sideways is funny. Hearts in Atlantis is non-horror Stephen King (the characters talk about books a lot) which isn't really funny but is more bitter-sweet and it is a great read. Thank You For Smoking is very funny.
How about Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons.



Excellent, excellent choice. Funny parody.


If you like mysteries, the late Donald Westlake has some funny books, sort of madcap thrillers, such as The Hot Rock or Cops and Robbers, both of which were turned into good movies. When Westlake wrote more serious books, he wrote as Richard Stark.

How about re-reading some children's classics? My favorite is HARRIET THE SPY. Re-reading it as an adult was a blast.
Aimee Bender's short stories are always great for a sideways laugh and an "ah ha!" weirdness factor.
TIPPING THE VELVET by Sarah Waters is a romp of a novel--a faux Victorian. A great read and often hilarious.
EGALIA'S DAUGHTERS: A SATIRE OF THE SEXES is a blast to read. It's very funny yet makes great comments about gender roles. It's about a world in which men and women's roles are reversed (just social roles, not biological ones). Men are called "Manwoms" because they are derivative of women, who are called "Woms." It's hard to wrap your mind around talking about it, but it really works on the page.

Francine Prose's The Blue Angel is amusing. Another engrossing and entertaining light-hearted narrative is Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin. It's on my currently reading list and it's enticing.




The World According to Garp.
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream is one of my favorites and the absurdity is elevated to high humor. Circus Circus was bad enough in a rational state in that era, let alone with 'a headful of ether'.
There's always the refuge of James Thurber and The 13 Clocks is certainly a charming and different fairy tale.
One more that is escapist and entertaining if not exactly happy is of course The Hobbit!
Happy reading.


I strongly suggest you try any of the Rumpole books by John Mortimer. They're well-written and LOL funny. :)



Apparently the 1001-list is not very funny. Most of the suggestions above are not list books.
The following books mentioned above are on the 1001-list:
Thank You, Jeeves
Tipping the Velvet
The World According to Garp
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
The 13 Clocks
The Hobbit
A Confederacy of Dunces
Pippi Longstocking




Add Richard Brautigan's "Willard and His Bowling Trophies" to the light and funny reads on at least one version of the 1001 List. And don't forget "Huckleberry Finn"!

Of the true comedies (not already mentioned),so far I've read:
"Tristram Shandy"
"The Good Soldier Svejk"
"Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day"
"Cannery Row"
"Dairy of a Nobody"
"Dirk Gentry's Holistic Detective Agency"
And then there are the Lewis Carrol Alice titles...
And Flannery O'Connor's "Wise Blood" and other titles (if you don't mind the dark, gothic humor)..
and others in that genre...




A humorous account of an upwardly mobile Pleistocene family's life.
2) Last Days of Summer by Steve Kluger

"The place is Brooklyn, the time is the early '40s, and young baseball fanatic Joey needs a hero badly in his life. How that hero becomes Charlie--and ultimately Joey himself--forms the dimensions of the novel's field, but it's the way the game is played that's so remarkable. The story's told not through conventional narrative but by way of Joey's abstract scrapbook: letters, postcards, news clippings, box scores, report cards, matchbook covers, dispatches from FDR, telegrams, even an invitation to Joey's own Bar Mitzvah and the gift list from the affair.
"Delightful throughout," this novel "develops a deeper traction when Charlie goes off to war, then turns poignant in its seemingly preordained aftermath."
3) Stolen from Gypsies by Noble Smith

This is a "hilarious novel set in the Napoleonic Age involving a stolen Gypsy baby, a tongue-tied accountant, a rich merchant, the merchant's ravishing daughter, magicians, spells, and much more..."

I would especially recommend Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day. It's short and sweet. They also made a great movie with it. Read the book first though, because the movie has a different twist to it.


Books mentioned in this topic
David Copperfield (other topics)Our Mutual Friend (other topics)
The Evolution Man: Or, How I Ate My Father (other topics)
Stolen from Gypsies (other topics)
Last Days of Summer (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Roy Lewis (other topics)Steve Kluger (other topics)
Noble Smith (other topics)
John Mortimer (other topics)