I love Terry Pratchet, I've got 8 of his Diskworld Series, I've only read 4 and a bit, and I love what I've read so far....though before xmas I never heard of him, then my friend gave me some books for xmas, and I haven't read anything else since....but I have taken a break from them for now, to read something else....er....'How To Kill A Mockingbird'.....I think...
It might only be me but, while I thought them both great books, I couldn't describe either "Garp" or a "Prayer for Owen Meany" as funny. Esp. the latter.
Christopher Brookmyre's "A Big Boy Did It And Ran Away" is a hell if a lot of fun.
Every-one should watch their drawers!
http://www.chalkcircle.com.au/
I just finished "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night", which did have a few good ones, and was poignant.
"White Teeth" also had some sweet laughs, but definitely is not comic in nature.
For pure laughs per page, it's gotta be "Confederacy of Dunces", in my book. Nothing has ever touched it.
Garp was funnier second time around for me because the first time I read it, I was so compelled by the story, I didn't laugh at the jokes, although I often saw them there. Second time around I've dealt with a lot of the serious stuff so I can laugh at the funny bits.
When I read Prayer for Owen Meany, I laughed often. It is a tragic tale punctuated by lots of funny interludes. And come on, The Nativity Scene has to be the most universally hilarious farce of modern times.
I understand why you didn't find them funny, but the humour is there, it's dark, yet it is never cruel. I don't think it's just you, many people I know feel the same way and I have had this conversation several times.
Karl, if you liked "Curious Incident" I'm sure you'll love "Motherless Brooklyn" by Jonathan Lethem. Not zactly funny *hah hah*, but more funny *odd*.
Protagonist has Tourette's - awesome insights into how he processes internally, in a similar way to the lead in "Curious Incident".
Peter, I'll second your nod to Brookmyre. Read everything he wrote after having stumbled upon "Big Boy".
I'll toss in Paul Quarrington. Canadian chap. "Whale Music" was indifferently movied. "King Leary" is a very funny look at hockey and old men. "The Life of Hope" does up small men and big fish in small towns.
Also Tim Sandlin "Skipped Parts", "Social Blunders" and "Sorrow Floats" - sorry, I don't remember which order they're in but it's a threesome. Very good coming of age stories, along the lines of Nick Whasisname's "Fever Pitch" and "High Fidelity".
Oooh. Oooh. And Daniel Handler's "Basic Eight". Not anything like his Lemony Snickett work. Black funny, like the movie "Heathers".
I'll have a look for "Motherless Brooklyn", sounds good.
"Fortune's Bastard" by Robert Chalmers was a real treat, introduced to me by our own Eddie. Not only is it a real joy watching the just-lame-enough-that-you-loath-him protaganist go from frying pan to fire to freak show, but you find youself starting to love him about midway through, against your better judgement.
Peter, having finished it on a train from Chiang Mai to Bangkok, I traded in my Banana Yoshimoto "Asleep" for "Well of Lost Plots" at a used bookstall where a crooked-backed peasant farmed a microscopic plot of rice in the very palm of his hand. I invested a couple of hundred baht in the thing and I'm finding it, well, certainly cheery after Bannana's stuff, but, um, only mildly engaging. Had you read the previous two first?
It might be a time and place thing, Karl, then again it might just be me but I liked the layers of fiction upon fiction and all the grammer, language and literature (in)jokes in "The Well of Lost Plots". It could also be that I have bad taste.
One of my all time favourites is "Venus in the Half-shell" by Kilgore Trout (according to the cover).
Every-one should watch their drawers!
http://www.chalkcircle.com.au/
Mm hm, or any Vonnegut. Strange that he hasn't been mentioned yet: and it might do to give a nod to Robbins, and Wodenhouse.
I won't write it off yet, it may pull me in still...
geraldo riviera ( sp?) was his son in law for a while...
i have tried to read lots of his books... but at the time i didn't get them.. mostly maybe i was too young...
he definately is a time and place sort of writer,
but
bluebeard was really good..
and
he did write my favorite love story ( it's in welcome to the monkey house ) but it's really short fiction... and in the intro to it he said it is one of the stories he hates the most ...
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