My Big Funny Summer Reading List

malignd at aol.com malignd at aol.com
Mon Jun 3 17:05:39 CDT 2013


One other outlier, from Hemingway of all people -- The Torrents of Spring. Hemingway was contractually obliged to give his first  novel to Horace Liveright, but wanted to sign with Scribners.  With The Sun Also Rises done, he tossed of Torrents, a bitchy and very funny parody of Sherwood Anderson's Dark Laughter, a terrible book. but Anderson was Liveright's top author, so they were forced to turn it down, leaving H. free to sign with Scribners.


Downside is that one needs to buy Dark Laughter in order to fully appreciate Torrents.



-----Original Message-----
From: malignd <malignd at aol.com>
To: pynchon-l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
Sent: Mon, Jun 3, 2013 5:56 pm
Subject: Re: My Big Funny Summer Reading List


I like Tom Sharpe too.  The Throwback, Wilt ...



-----Original Message-----
From: Charles Albert <cfalbert at gmail.com>
To: kelber <kelber at mindspring.com>
Cc: Pynchon Liste <pynchon-l at waste.org>
Sent: Mon, Jun 3, 2013 7:26 am
Subject: Re: My Big Funny Summer Reading List



My favorite Murder - Ambrose Bierce

Mark Twain skewers James Fenimore Cooper - http://twain.lib.virginia.edu/projects/rissetto/offense.html


Porterhouse Blue, Riotous Assembly - Tom Sharpe


love,
cfa




On Sun, Jun 2, 2013 at 5:18 PM,  <kelber at mindspring.com> wrote:

Been dealing with some emotionally rough stuff lately, and need some diversion. I can handle reading about Nazis, torture, toxic waste, and Man's inhumanity to Man during the days, but at night I need some reading matter that won't keep me lying awake in agony until dawn. Only it's damn hard to find books that are both intelligent and genuinely funny. There's plenty of humor in Pynchon, or in books like Catch-22, say, but it's accompanied by stuff that's too dark for me in my present fragile-minded state. I can think of plenty of funny movies and TV shows (Arrested Development, Season 4, being the latest). And years later, I still laugh at the Mad Magazine offerings I loved as a kid - heavy on parody and cranky sarcasm. But it's really hard to think of many laugh-out-loud books. Offhand, I'm thinking David Lodge (Nice Work, Small World, etc.); Alison Lurie (Imaginary Friends. Probably should read more of her); Kingsley Amis's Lucky Jim; No Name, by Wilkie Collins. I'm sure we can all recommend lots of great books, but how many at the top of our lists are genuinely funny, with no depressing elements [NOT Pale Fire, for example]. Tangent to the is-or-isn't-literature-morally-edifying conversation, is there something about humor (wordplay, parody, genuinely funny insights about character) that's too lowbrow for high-minded literary types to bother with?

So, any recommendations of really funny books that aren't Shakespearean comedies of error (sorry), and that don't remind one even obliquely of genocide or cruelty to animals or toxic waste?

Laura





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