posted
I'm a firm believer that laughter truly is the best medicine. I know that I feel better after I've watched a funny movie, or while reading a funny book.
So, I'm looking for suggestions on well written humorous books. Also your favorite funny movies.
My all time favorite humor (or should I say humour)books are the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series, by Douglas Adams. Of course, you may have guessed that by my screen name... If you aren't familiar with his writing, it's zany but intelligent british sci-fi. New movie coming out the end of April, looks good-ish.
My favorite new book is Pirates of Pensacola by Keith Thomson. Official release date is tomorrow, but Amazon released it a couple weeks early. (Oh, and one of the bad guys is named Lyme, which pushed it over the top in my list of faves.) One of the few books that actually had me laughing out loud!
Favorite funny movie is The Princess Bride. (Also an excellent book.)
Loved Shrek. Yes, I have been told that I have the mind of a 12 year old. No, it isn't in a bottle of formaldehyde on my desk.
So, what are your favorite comedy books/movies?
Posts: 91 | From Atlanta, GA | Registered: Jan 2005
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posted
I only recently discovered Red Green, on public broadcasting- I LOVE it! Can't watch more than half an hour at a time, my stomach starts hurting.
Thanks for replying, I was starting to think I'm the only person who likes to laugh...
Posts: 91 | From Atlanta, GA | Registered: Jan 2005
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posted
Well, maybe you might try "Last of the summer wine" also on public broadcasting. It is a long way from sci fi and red green, but it still cracks me up.
Posts: 8430 | From Not available | Registered: Oct 2000
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"The Lion in Winter" (1961) starring Peter O'Toole and Katherine Hepburn
"Little Big Man", starring Dustin Hoffman
Newer movies would include:
"As Good as it Gets", with Jack Nicolson and Helen Hunt
"The Life Aquatic with Steve ZuZu" Bill Murray, Angelica Huston, ect. This is a dark comedy--so if you like that sort of thing--fine, if you don't--you probaly will think it's the dumbest flick on the planet. I place it in the same catergory as "The Royal Tennenbaums'", and "Pulp Fiction"
Sitcoms: I just love "Seinfeld", and "Frasier", but "Will and Grace" come in a close second--that Karen is my alter ego!!!
Drew Carreys' pretty funny also!!
"Red Green" IS just like my father, and my brother-in-law---with all that duck tape--it's a great show!!
posted
Thanks! Any suggestions on lighthearted, funny books? Anybody?
Posts: 91 | From Atlanta, GA | Registered: Jan 2005
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minoucat
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 5175
posted
These aren't comedy laugh-a-minute books, but they are very funny, and sometimes enormously interesting.
Get the following on tape if you can (I did through my library) because the accents are so much fun:
MC Beaton -- the Hamish Macbeth series (Death of a Dentist, etc.) Not at all morbid--the mysteries are just an excuse to talk about small town life in the hebrides.
Lilian Beckworth -- The Sea for Breakfast, The Loud Halo, and some others (but not An Island Apart). She went to the Hebrides in the 60s an lived on her own small croft. She might as well have timetravelled to the 1500s.
John Mortimer's Rumpole of the Bailey series. ------
Betty McDonald -- The Plague and I (absolutely fascinating, as well as beautifully written), about her recovery from TB in the days before antibiotids; The Egg and I; Onions in the Stew
Terry Pratchett (Discworld series), if you enjoyed Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy
Simon R. Green's Nightside series
James Thurber
HL Menken, if you have a taste for a master of words from the turn of the century (the turn before the most recent turn).
Gerald Durrell's "My Family and Other Animals"
And if you like travel, and food, and very fine writing, MFK Fisher is a pearl. Not a side splitter, but very funny in parts and can take you completely out of yourself. Her "How to cook a wolf" is a classic, but my favorite is "Two Towns in Provence"
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