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Can anyone recommend a decent funny book?

123 replies

dalek · 04/10/2007 20:00

I fabcy something that makes me laugh - or at least chuckle - any suggestions?

TIA
x

OP posts:
Turquoise · 05/10/2007 19:01

Definitely second Janet Evanovich (only the Plum series though, and the earlier ones rather than 8 or so onwards) and Roddy Doyle's The Van - also The Snapper had me crying with laughter.

ScottishMummy · 05/10/2007 19:11

another bill bryson vote- i did laugh out loud on bus reading it, well described accurate

tyaca · 05/10/2007 20:29

for giggle like an idiot in public, i would go for Them by Jon Ronson

but then i'm on a crusade to make everyone read it - it truly rocks

non-fic - geeky neurotic jewish journo tries to infiltrate extremist groups all over world. all true - stalks nutty isalmic cleric omar bakri, gets busted as jewish in a neo nazi american camp etc etc

really funny, i don't usually like non-fic, but ACE

(also a fail safe choice for present for any men in your life, yet to meet someone who didnt love it)

hana · 05/10/2007 20:33

Larry's Party by Carol Shields is a pretty funny book

Larry Weller is a regular guy, or so Carol Shields has him think. When we first meet him in 1977 Winnipeg at age 26, he's pondering the pluses of Harris tweed, still living at home, and realizing he's in love with his girlfriend, Dorrie, a flinty car saleswoman. Larry is proud of his job at Flowerfolks, even though he fell into floral design by accident, and if his relationship with his parents isn't perfect, it's not too bad, either. (Stu and Flo Weller may have less page-time in Larry's Party, but they are hugely memorable. He is a master upholsterer, happiest when working; she is a woman ruined by nervous guilt, having inadvertently killed off her mother-in-law with some improperly preserved green beans.)
Carol Shields has said that she had "always been struck by the fact that in most novels people aren't working." Though her hero climbs the floral managerial trellis for 17 years and finds more rhapsody in work than marriage, Larry and Dorrie's honeymoon in England points him toward what will be his true vocationmazes. These living constructs turn him into a thinker, a man of imagination, and the author's descriptions are quietly spectacular as well as effortlessly sweet. Larry wonders at their "teasing elegance and circularity ... a snail, a scribble, a doodle on the earth's skin with no other directed purpose but to wind its sinuous way around itself." Just as Larry changes with the timeseach elliptical chapter ages him by one or two years--so does his art. In 1990, he designs a maze in which you can't really lose yourself. In 1997, the McCord Maze "is intended to mirror the descent into unconscious sleep, followed by a slow awakening." Larry, too, has a slow awakening, taking several false turns before reaching midlife. As the novel closes, with a bravura dinner party scene, he may finally be at ease in the world. But his creator knows that he is only halfway there, and still has to negotiate his way from the center of the maze to its exit

bran · 05/10/2007 20:35

I was just about to mention Tom Sharp Christie. Although I wasn't that keen on Porterhouse Blue. I think The Throwback and Blot on the Horizon were my favourites.

For romantic comedy I like Jennifer Crusie, especially Welcome to Temptation which is sort of Pride and Prejudice in the Mid-West of America.

mrsmerton · 05/10/2007 20:37

Peter Kays biography is very funny, had my dh in stitches.

mrsmerton · 05/10/2007 20:38

I mean auto biography, of course.

Christie · 05/10/2007 23:18

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

bran · 06/10/2007 12:19

No I missed it, I may not have been in the UK at the time. I did see Blot on the Landscape (not horizon, my memory is obviously failing) and it was fabulous.

Hels67 · 06/10/2007 16:17

I'd definitely recommend Bill Bryson - in particular The Lost Continent - which as many have written here laugh-out-loud funny - and describes a part of America that generally gets little coverage.

Ben Elton is very enjoyable, particularly Dead Famous or Gridlock.

Really didn't like the Stephen Fry book (Was it The star's tennis balls?) - the one about the revenge plot? The descriptions at the end were far too graphic for me - not enjoyable at all

One of my very favourite books is My family and Other Animals by Gerald Durrell - some of the descriptions of the animal life can be a bit tedious, but the descriptions of the island (Corfu) are delightful, and the antics of his family and friends are beautifully described and so very funny - at school I had to write an essay on this book for an exam and it was touch and go whether I'd actually laugh out loud in the silent school hall

StripeyKnickersSpottySocks · 07/10/2007 17:21

Jeremy Clarkson's books.

pyjamagirlgotbitbyvampires · 07/10/2007 17:24

Adrian Mole

Pruners · 07/10/2007 17:44

Message withdrawn

MaryAnnSingletomb · 07/10/2007 17:47

Cold Comfort Farm !

MaryAnnSingletomb · 07/10/2007 17:50

The Best a Man can Get
and
May contain nuts both by John O'Farrell

woodyrocks · 07/10/2007 18:03

Well you asked for it - just don't say I didn't warn you. This is SOOOOO funny you I advice against reading on the tube

OUTSIDE PROVIDENCE by Peter Farrelly

rabbitrabbit · 07/10/2007 18:20

Everything ever written by Bill Bryson is excellent. Also just finished "I think there's something wrong with me" by Nigel Smith, some of it is laugh out loud funny. Very good, give it a go!

PatsyCline · 07/10/2007 18:22

Agree with lots on here, especially Janet Evanovich and Cold Comfort Farm.

Catch 22 is funny and sad at the same time (much like Owen Meany which has me in floods of tears).

I really enjoyed reading "Who Moved My Blackberry?" last year.

leakyR · 07/10/2007 18:32

Sucking Sherbet Lemons and/or Stripping Penguins Bare by Michael Carson.

hazeyjane · 08/10/2007 20:09

You may not want a book about pregnancy/motherhood, but the two Mel Giedroyc (of Mel+ Sue) books, "From Here to Maternity" and "Going Gaga" are very funny, my husband read bits of them to me whilst I was in labour (so it could have been the effect of the drugs), but had to keep stopping because he was laughing so much.

Snaf · 08/10/2007 20:20

Anything by David Sedaris; the one Pruners recommended, or Me Talk Pretty One Day, or Barrel Fever/The Santaland Diaries. All absolutely brilliant and snortingly hilarious.

Avadawnsmum · 21/10/2007 23:31

"The Queen and I" by Sue Townsend - Brilliant story about the Royal family being ousted by a revolutionary government and being forced to live on a council estate.
Was writte in 1992 so wuite old but a cracking read nonetheless

wrinklytum · 22/10/2007 00:18

Maybe a bit bizarre but spike milligans war diaries are funny and poignant in equal measures.Very old fashioned probably but well worth a read."Hitler-my part in his downfall".Never thought I would find it an interestng read but I did.

NoBiggy · 22/10/2007 00:30

Agree about Jasper Fforde.

Recently read Making Love by Marius Brill. Recommend it.

pigletmaker · 23/10/2007 08:24

Talk of the Town by Ardal O'Hanlon. Very funny first half, darker in 2nd.

Lolita by Nabokov. Hilarious from start to finish.

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