Non fiction

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Non fiction

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1SimonW11
Editat: gen. 14, 2007, 5:23 am

So as i browse through stiff I am moved to ask what Non fiction makes you laugh I suspect Travel such as McCarthy's Bar or round ireland with a fridge will get the votes but I suspect you will want to tell me different.

Simon

2mackan
gen. 14, 2007, 5:21 am

Michael Moore? Yes - very political, but if you (like me) don't live in the US, it's actually pretty funny :)

3pechmerle
gen. 14, 2007, 5:33 am

Calvin Trillin has a number of very funny non-fiction collections of travel writings, e.g., Travels With Alice.

4coffeezombie
gen. 14, 2007, 10:27 am

Sarah Vowell's stuff is some of the funniest non-fiction I've read, particularly Assassination Vacation, which is a funny romp through the history of US political murder.

5bookishbunny
gen. 14, 2007, 10:31 am

Bill Bryson. Also, Dave Barry Slept Here was hilarious.

6sunny
Editat: gen. 14, 2007, 2:00 pm

Last chance to see by Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine. Not that the subject is funny, but DNA was hired "to be an extremely ignorant nonzoologist to whom everything that happened would come as a complete surprise."

I wish I hadn't said that: the experts speak - and get it wrong! by Christopher Cerf and Victor Navasky.

The book of Gossage. Back in print.

Also, Gary Larson shows up as non-fiction in my suggestion lists, but I guess that doesn't count? ;-)

7mackan
gen. 14, 2007, 3:45 pm

Actually, come to think about it, Scott Adams has written some serious, funny stuff as well.

8sunny
Editat: gen. 14, 2007, 6:43 pm

The books by Deborah Tannen and Bonnie Kreps.






9survivingniki
març 13, 2007, 12:59 am

Bookishbunny, I agree with you on Dave Barry Slept Here I remember laughing aloud with a classmate while we were reading it together at what was supposed to be a quiet school function.

I also find David Sedaris to be hilarious. Oh, and Augusten Burroughs too. Anyone know of any female authors that are that laugh-aloud funny?

10EncompassedRunner
març 13, 2007, 4:14 am

The Bible, God's pretty funny, a point brought out in The Humor of Jesus: Sources of Laughter in the Bible by Earl F. Palmer.

11BoPeep
març 13, 2007, 4:48 am

There's a genre of 'funny mummy' books that are often quite funny in a laugh-aloud way - From Here To Maternity by Mel Giedroyc (the title's been used a few times but I only know hers is non-fiction and funny!), for instance, or Kate Konopicky's A Woman Of No Importance. I don't doubt that some of it has been fictionalised, but the majority hasn't.

12bookishbunny
març 13, 2007, 9:07 am

#9

Remember: "Smoot - Holley - Damn it." (or something like that on the Nixon tapes).

I was so enamored with the Smoot-Holley Tariff running jokes that I named a character I played after it. I still refer to my big purple sunglasses as my 'Holly Smoots'.

13akenned5
març 14, 2007, 7:18 pm

Bill Bryson tops my list, but I also love Danny Katz's newspaper column. As he is Australian, it seems likely not many of you will know his writing. Stephen Potter is also a long time favourite. I don't know if his up-man-ship books would be classed as fiction or non-fiction?

14SimonW11
març 14, 2007, 11:00 pm

well since I doubt the school they purported to advertise existed I think we can assume they are fiction.

15coasterb
març 25, 2007, 12:38 am

Heres a good book which has some funny stories about living in the country Tales From Great Grandpa's Trunk.

16andrewa121
març 25, 2007, 9:47 am

Not a well-known book, but a wonderful and humorous look at reservation life can be found in Ted Williams's (no not the baseball player) aptly titled book, The Reservation. Hard to find, though. I bought a signed copy years ago at a Native American bookstore. Definitely worth a read if you can find it, though.

17finalbroadcast
abr. 10, 2007, 8:33 pm

Dan Savage
Sarah Vowell
Augsten Burroughs
David Sedaris

18Windy
abr. 12, 2007, 2:58 pm

All of those and Erma Bombeck.

19marfita
abr. 13, 2007, 1:16 pm

Saw David Sedaris last night. Soooo funny! Seemed like he only talked for a few minutes, but turned out to be something like 90. Of course, I was terribly hurt that he didn't remember me from last year. "Marf? I've never heard that name before," he said. "Oh yes you have!" quoth my husband. I also recognized the Arthur the Aardvark wrangler from ETV that night.

Love David Sedaris ... love, love, love him. And Dan Savage, Sarah Vowell. I'm one of those Prisoners of Public Radio.

20scottja
abr. 13, 2007, 1:54 pm

Having someone else mention Sedaris in the non-fiction thread seems like a good occasion to bring up the 'controversy' stirred up by this article.

Personally, I think it's just silly. I think everyone realizes that Sedaris and other 'autobiographical' humorists exaggerate all the time. Anyone else have any thoughts?

21marfita
abr. 13, 2007, 4:38 pm

Last night he did a whole riff alla the Frey episode and I thought it was just plain hilarious. He wanted to explain that he had fictionalized some of the material he was about to read. He mentioned the James Frey controversy and how upset "his wife Gina was to discover that Frey had made it up." I howled.
Non-fiction can just be essays. In fact, I think that's where he is usually placed, although I do see a "fiction" and a "biography" designation next to some titles in our library.
I have noticed that his "fiction" never really comes up to the level of his "non-fiction." It seems more cruel to ascribe these stories to a fictional character whereas taking the blame on himself for his foibles, opinions, dependencies makes him more lovable.
I don't expect any non-fiction to be free of fact twisting to make a better story. Especially autobiographical non-fiction. I'm always writing things that actually happened and, you know, they just aren't that entertaining.
I'm amazed that there wereaccuracies in those stories.

22blink_shrug Primer missatge
Editat: abr. 13, 2007, 6:18 pm

survivingnikki--
I once read a review of Beth Lisick's Everybody into the Pool in which the reviewer essentially said that Lisick's writing was like that of David Sedaris...if Sedaris were in possession of female anatomy. Make of that statement what you will, but I did laugh out loud a few times and did enjoy it, overall. I don't know that I'd necessarily rank her next to Sedaris, but if you're looking for a funny female writer of nonfiction (aside from Sarah Vowell, who is an absolute given), I'd give Lisick a shot.

23keigu
gen. 7, 2010, 12:22 am

Dave Barry is mentioned here, Carl Hiassen in another talk -- well, how about dead columnists? No Royko lovers here? I still recall some of the wording in a column of his on Baltimore speak (Oltno = I don't know) and the powerful German pub maid's treatment of the drunk GI and the datschund who needed an icetray to defrost his extremities after a walk in the snow, etc. . .

24alu042
Editat: gen. 8, 2010, 7:00 am

One pretty funny author not listed here is John Allen Paulos. He's written some funny books, especially I Think, Therefore I Laugh about humor, logic and philosophy. Also check out Innumeracy, A Mathematician Reads the Newspaper and Irreligion. He's excellent at making interesting points using jokes.

25Booksloth
gen. 8, 2010, 7:19 am

#1 You picked a great author to start with. Mary Roach's Bonk also tickeld me considerably. It's quite hard for me to find books laugh-out-loud-able but there are a few that I've read several times now and that still make me snortle away. One of my favourites is God: the Ultimate Autobiography by Jeremy Pascall - (God's own version of that Bible thing of which you speak, #10 and I'll definitely be on the lookout for your recommendation). Bill Bryson still cracks me up too, as does Michael Moore (most of the time). And I just read How Not to Write a Novel which snagged me quite a few "NOW what are you sniggering at"s from the rest of the family.

26Nixonesque
ag. 23, 2011, 2:38 pm

Unlike Sedaris, Lisick refrains from being overly clever and predictable. I loved David Sedaris, but found I soon knew where he was going after the first couple sentences. Lisick continues to catch me off guard and actually makes me laugh out loud, rather than just give a "Huh...".

27Nixonesque
ag. 23, 2011, 2:54 pm

I have to put Beth Lisick's Helping Me Help Myself up on this list. I'm reading it now, and I realize it has been a really long time since I have had so many emotions triggered from a non-fiction book, on top of the laugh-out-loud-ability factor that seems so lacking in fiction and non-fiction. The book focuses on Lisick's attempt at self-improvement over the course of a year, as she test-drives several well-established self-help regimens. She is not overly cute, or clever (as so many young memoir-writers are these days) but approaches her storytelling honestly, without trying to impress us. When we laugh, it seems by accident on her her part. She's just naturally funny. Example: she describes the beginning of her carnival cruise with Richard Simmons as the beginning of a "tyranny of fun", a term which I could apply to so much of life. There's no set up or punchline to her humor. It flows.