Books on the Nightstand discussion
Book Specific Discussions
>
Books that make you laugh


The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and Innocents Abroad, both by Mark Twain.
Douglas Adams
P.G. Wodehouse
David Sedaris
Jane Austen can be very funny.
Douglas Adams
P.G. Wodehouse
David Sedaris
Jane Austen can be very funny.

I haven't read David Sedaris, although I've heard him on radio shows. I should check him out.
I'm not really a LOL person when I'm reading, but I do find that Mr. Midshipman Hornblower(by C.F. Forester) has it moments. In this collection of short stories, we meet Horatio Hornblower as a very young and green, make that seasick-green, boy learning the ropes :-)

Douglas Adams
P.G. Wodehouse
David Sedaris
Jane Austen can be very funny."
I second all of the above, and I add Terry Prachett.
By John R. Powers;
The Last Catholic In America
Do Black Patent Leather Shoes Really Reflect Up?
[authorimage:Nora Ephron Nora Ephron
Bill Bryson
Douglas Adams
Erma Bombeck
Lewis Grizzard
Dave Barry
Lemony Snicket ("Kill you till you're dead")
Jon Scieszka
Gregory Maguire
Calvin Trillin
Carl Hiaasen
Nora Ephron


[authorimage:Nora Ephron Nora Ephron














Bridget Jones' Diary is still the funniest book I have ever read. The sequel, The Edge of Reason, is very funny, too. If you're anything of a chronic dieter or self-improver, you will laugh at Bridget and yourself!
Has anyone read any Michael Malone? I have three sitting on my TBR pile and the jacket description sounds funny, but I'd love a personal recommendation from this crowd.

I haven't read Michael Malone, Terry Pratchett, or The Confederacy of Dunces, but they get mentioned so often I should probably just dive in and try them. After I finish the Mobile Library books!


Thank you. I'll put Handling Sin on my short list!

This espcially suits women who have teenage daughters!

Nick Hornby has his moments, especially in the columns collected in "Housekeeping vs. The Dirt."

This espcially suits woment who have teenage daughters!"
Ooh me too. I listened to it in the car.



Also strongly recommended: Stella Gibbons' Cold Comfort Farm, Bailey White's Mama Makes Up Her Mind: And Other Dangers of Southern Living, H. E. Bates' The Darling Buds of May, Donald Westlake's non-series comic crime novels from the 1960s and '70s (e.g. God Save the Mark), and many of Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels (e.g. the first in the City Watch subseries, Guards! Guards!).

And, oddly enough, The Trialby Franz Kafka had me literally rolling until I suddenly got hysterically creeped out, by which time I was far too caught to get out of the book.

I love Malone-almost everything by him. My favorites are Dingley Fallsand Handling Sin. I also really like Foolscap and Time's Witness. Enjoy!


The Mammy
by Brendan O'Carroll"
I read a sample after reading your post, then ended up buying the book.....very funny, great characters. If not for your post I'd probably never have found it so thanks!!

However, based on the two endorsements above for The Mammy by Brendan O'Carroll, I went in search of an excerpt to see what the fuss was about. I was snorting and hooting so loudly just from the excerpt that my husband told me to "pipe down!" Am definitely buying the book.
Paul Is Undead: The British Zombie Invasion (by Alan Goldsher; narrated by Simon Vance) is an oral history of the Beatles... if the Beatles were zombies. While I'm not into the Beatles, or zombies, or any kind of mash up, this is truly fun and funny. Simon Vance mimics all of the Beatles plus all the ancillary characters like Pete best, Mick Jagger, Brian Epstein, managers, groupies... in an irreverent absurdist comedy. Fair warning though, there's quite a bit of scatological humor and profanity - think Monty Python, uncensored! It was all I could do not to quote and tweet every line that made me laugh!


Gerald Durrell's memoir My Family and Other Animals is hysterical as are his varous books about his animal collecting trips.

I'm curious to read some of Terrry Pratchett's work , but the disc world series is some 30 books long!! I wouldn't know which one was the first!!

Misty wrote: "I'm curious to read some of Terrry Pratchett's work , but the disc world series is some 30 books long!! I wouldn't know which one was the first!! "
There are a couple of really great sites for checking out series order. One is fantasticfiction.com and the other is fictfact.com. Fantasticfiction.com covers all authors' works while ficfact.com only covers series. But to answer your question, the first-in-series for the Discworld books is The Color of Magic :-)
There are a couple of really great sites for checking out series order. One is fantasticfiction.com and the other is fictfact.com. Fantasticfiction.com covers all authors' works while ficfact.com only covers series. But to answer your question, the first-in-series for the Discworld books is The Color of Magic :-)



The Mammy
by Brendan O'Carroll"
Thanks for this Randy...I just read it and couldn't help laughing out loud! Looking forward to the next two!

Callie...I'm with you here! Loved the book...movie was very good too, but the BOOK was great!

I love this topic as we certainly can use more laughter in our lives. It's hard to find books that are laugh out loud funny and of course, everyone's idea of humor is not the same. Like Tanya, I don't often laugh when reading but can remember laughing while reading Carl Hiaasen (pick any) and I don't know how she does it by Allison Pearson. Randy's vote for Them Mammy by Brendan O'Carroll is an all time favorite of mine.
Keep em' coming!
Keep em' coming!

LAMB by Christopher Moore - Funny and irreverent so recommend with caution but I chortled throughout.
Dave Barry's GUIDE TO GUYS - I listened to this and almost drove off the road as tears were pouring down my face. His guide to bad songs is hysterical, too.
I HATE MYSELF AND WANT TO DIE by Tom Reynolds is a baby boomer's music guide to the most depressing songs ever written and what sold me was his hysterical description of my pre-teen fave, Last Kiss.
PETER AND THE STARCATCHERS series by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson. This is a children's series and best read in audio format. I've recommended this for many a road trip as Jim Dale narrates all of them and they are fun for the entire family.
And speaking of audio, if done by a good narrator, a book in audio can be even funnier than reading it in book form.
I used to find Sue Grafton's books funny, and while they are still good, Kinsey is getting a little jaded and the books don't quite have the same sense of fun but the earlier books made me LOL many times.
I have more but can't think of them right now. Will pick up The Mammy as I love to laugh while reading even though DH (and co-workers in the staff room) hate it. :)

I guess I like Friedman. And it doesn't hurt that the books take place in NYC.
Which reminds me, although they're a little on the cutesy side, & make me smile more than lol, there the Lawrence Block burglar series. Especially The Burglar Who Studied Spinoza, The Burglar in the Rye, & The Burglar Who Painted Like Mondrian. But all of them really-& he's so the opposite of funny in his Matt Scudder series, which I really adore.



I haven't read Michael Malone, Terry Pratchett, or The Confedera..."
Woolly1 wrote: "Oh, yes, I remember laughing with Bridget Jones' Diary. Just for the record, I'm usually a silent reader myself, but sometimes....
I haven't read Michael Malone, Terry Pratchett, or The Confedera..."
Bridget Jones was HYSTERICAL. I remember reading it on a train when I was commuting to work & laughing out loud.
I also laughed out loud while reading Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods.
Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods in on my all time favorite reading list. I have bought it and passed it on several times. We also read it for our non-fic book group and had a great time discussing it. I've seen Bill talk a few times and love listening to him.
The little debbie scene in A Walk in the Woods is priceless!
The little debbie scene in A Walk in the Woods is priceless!

W. Somerset Maugham - especially his short stories "The three fat women of Antibes" and "The luncheon".
Christopher Brookmyre writes the most hilarious, action packed stories like "Be my enemy" and "A tale etched in blood and hard black pencil", and lastely the genius Jasper Fforde has written the best series about literary detective Thursday Next - who amongst other things get to travel inside books in a prose portal made by Sherlock Holmes' brother Mycroft.
The first one is called "The Eyre Affair", and this guy has the most amazing imagination. Has anyone else read his books?


I would read parts of the book out loud to my mother and we both chuckled.
Books mentioned in this topic
Assassination Vacation (other topics)When the Cat's Away (other topics)
The Burglar in the Rye (other topics)
God Bless John Wayne (other topics)
Curse of the Missing Puppet Head (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
David Sedaris (other topics)Sarah Vowell (other topics)
Lawrence Block (other topics)
Kinky Friedman (other topics)
Iris Murdoch (other topics)
More...
So while I sit here with my Mobile Library books and my tissues, I wonder, what other books might provoke the same response?