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Thread: Funniest Book Ever Read

  1. #241
    Skol'er of Thinkery The Comedian's Avatar
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    David James Duncan's The River Why made me laugh and laugh and laugh.
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  2. #242
    Registered User JhKreisler's Avatar
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    Funniest book or author

    I know literature is sometimes assumed to be dead serious, but there are a few works and authors that prove the opposite by writing a higly literary book with a very funny side. I'm reading the drama-works of Harold Pinter and it's really humoristicly written

    Do you guys know any good books that also made you laugh?
    Last edited by JhKreisler; 03-17-2010 at 06:17 PM.
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  3. #243
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    Cool There are so many ...

    Mark Twain
    Moliere
    Aristophnaes
    Shakespeare
    Max Beerbohm
    Evelyn Waugh
    P. G. Wodehouse and one could go on ad infinitum.

  4. #244
    O dark dark dark Barbarous's Avatar
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    defintely go with Gargantua and Pantagruel by Rabelais and The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence Sterne, the funniest books I have ever read!
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    A ist der Affe NickAdams's Avatar
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  6. #246
    Registered User Dogbrick's Avatar
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    The late, great Douglas Adams.....

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    Quote Originally Posted by JhKreisler View Post
    I know literature is sometimes assumed to be dead serious, but there are a few works and authors that prove the opposite by writing a higly literary book with a very funny side. I'm reading the drama-works of Harold Pinter and it's really humoristicly written

    Do you guys know any good books that also made you laugh?


    Holy crap that is the first Pinter comment I've seen on these forums, The Dumb Waiter and The Caretaker are amazing and quite funny.

    Also I thought Candide by Voltaire, The Doctor is Sick by Burgess, The Fur Hat by Voinovich and Breakfast of Champions by Vonnegut were all pretty funny.

  8. #248
    Jethro BienvenuJDC's Avatar
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    L Frank Baum
    The Oz Series
    Les Miserables,
    Volume 1, Fifth Book, Chapter 3
    Remember this, my friends: there are no such things as bad plants or bad men. There are only bad cultivators.

  9. #249
    unidentified hit record blp's Avatar
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    Agree on Breakfast of Champions, Douglas Adams and Molloy.

    It's quite rare that I find a book really funny. But actually, War and Peace has been making me laugh quite a bit at times. American Psycho did too.

  10. #250
    Registered User hellsapoppin's Avatar
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    Practical Jokes With Artemus Ward by Mark Twain. Funninest book I ever read in my life!
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  11. #251
    Jethro BienvenuJDC's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by blp View Post
    Agree on Breakfast of Champions, Douglas Adams and Molloy.

    It's quite rare that I find a book really funny. But actually, War and Peace has been making me laugh quite a bit at times. American Psycho did too.
    I'd forgotten about Douglas Adams, and Lewis Carroll also had some humorous/silly works...
    Les Miserables,
    Volume 1, Fifth Book, Chapter 3
    Remember this, my friends: there are no such things as bad plants or bad men. There are only bad cultivators.

  12. #252
    aspiring Arthurianist Wilde woman's Avatar
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    Anything by (guess who!) Oscar Wilde is hilarious, but I recommend "The Importance of Being Earnest."

    Also, I quite enjoyed "The Rape of the Lock" by Pope and Catch-22 by Heller.

    For some old-school (as in Classical and medieval) humor, I really like Catullus and Chaucer. Oh, and The Golden *** by Apuelius.

  13. #253
    somewhere else Helga's Avatar
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    there are many authors who are funny in there seriousness like Wilde, and others that are funny in a more absurd sense like Douglas Adams... but the last book I read and laughed out loud every 3 minuets or so was Marley and me by the columnist John Grogan, as a dog owner who knows how 'difficult' dogs can be, it was a very amusing book!
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  14. #254
    Registered User keilj's Avatar
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    Mark Twain definitely comes to mind. The Innocents Abroad, his autobiography, or Roughing It in particular are very funny. Whether he's describing hiding on a rooftop and dropping a watermelon on his younger brother's head, or describing a sea captain who can drink "astonishing amounts of whiskey while never showing any signs of feeling the effects", or describing an Indian mining friend who decided a good place to store dynamite was in the stove.


    I also heard that George Bernard Shaw's Man and Superman is very funny. I just bought it but have not gotten to read it yet

  15. #255
    www.markbastable.co.uk
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    Dickens, Southern, Amis, Vonnegut. And above all, Wodehouse.

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