Parodies Books


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Movies-->Titles-->S-->Star Wars Movies-->Humor-->Parodies-->28
Related Subjects: Hardware Wars
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Parodies Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Parodies
Sluggy Freelance: Yippy Skippy, the Evil! (Book 5)
Published in Paperback by Plan Nine Pub (2001-02-01)
Authors: Peter Abrams and Pete Abrams
List price: $12.95
New price: $185.00
Used price: $124.94

Average review score:

Sluggy tells the truth again.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-28
As all sluggite fans should know by know, Sluggy Freelance keeps pounding out truth, beauty, freedom and above all warning about dangerous mini-lops. Fans of the previous books will not be disapointed with this one. And remember, all games should be called on account of naked chicks!

Abrams' newest bizarre masterpiece!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-08
I gotta say that this is definitely one of the best webcomics in the world. Heck, better than any print comics in MY opinion. In any case, though, Sluggy Freelance is a beautifully drawn, creatively worded, hilarious tour de force that is sure to provide hours and hours of great entertainment.

For those of you unfamiliar with the comic, Sluggy Freelance is a webcomic started by Pete Abrams a few years ago. Since its debut, Sluggy Freelance has assimilated thousands and thousands of daily readers and has won numerous awards, both for popularity and content. It follows the lives of Torg, freelance web designer, and Riff, his friend the inventor/"freelance bum." Along with a warped cast of characters, such as Bun-bun the switchblade-wielding lop bunny, and Kiki the ignorant ferret, Sluggy is one of the most creative and entertaining forms of media known to man. If you're looking for an offbeat and entertaining comic that's actually got true humor, substance, and depth, check out this book.

One word of advice to new readers: Be sure to order the other books in the series first, as some storylines follow a certain chronological order. However, by no means is it necessary - the stories flow fine by themselves.

All in all, a wonderful book you'll be reading again and again.

Parodies
Snl Presents The Clinton Years
Published in Paperback by TV Books (1999-11-01)
Authors: Cast of SNL, Michael Shoemaker, Scott Weinstein, and Mike Shoemaker
List price: $14.95
New price: $6.34
Used price: $0.70

Average review score:

sdfgh
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-12
this is hilarious. I laughed the entire time i read the book.

A hilarious book satirizing "The Clinton Years"
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-08
Jim Wrenn, author of the Clinton Liebrary Book 2001 Edition at clintonliebrarybook.com gives a rave review to SNL Presents The Clinton Years: "I laughed so hard my throat hurt. It will be banned from all public libraries because no one will be able to read it without laughing out loud. The book presents color pictures and text from SNL skits (about Clinton) in such a way as to elicit just as much laughter as watching the skit on Saturday Night Live."

Parodies
So You Want To Be President?
Published in Paperback by Tow Books (2008-03-04)
Author: John Warner
List price: $9.99
New price: $1.00
Used price: $0.36

Average review score:

McCain and Obama and YOU should read this book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
I loved this book. It made me laugh... and really... what else can you do but laugh given the current state of our government and its politicians. It's pretty darn good.

Gut-Bustin' Funny
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-07
If you watch The Daily Show... if you read The Onion... if you crave devastatingly hilarious, over-the-top humor... get this book. The side-splitters-per-page ratio is on a par with Jon Stewart's America (The Book). This book may not be as lavishly illustrated, but don't let that fool you. This is a must-have!

Parodies
Stolen Snapshots Presents: Things to Do with Beer Bottles
Published in Paperback by Alliterative Authors Press (2003-07-15)
Author: Eric Zork Alan
List price: $4.00
New price: $1.40
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

A National Slam Poet writes a goofy BEER book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-26
I saw Zork perform in a Memphis Bookstore after he held a SLAM poetry workshop at my son's high school and then held a ZorkSlam at a Memphis Barnes & Noble store [where Zork spotlighted my son & other student poets]. I was expecting at the Barnes & Noble event that Zork would be selling his book of poetry ["Stolen Snapshots: I am NOT a poet"], BUT I was not expecting that he had written a dumb $4 beer book. This book is pricelessly funny. I bought 6 copies to give to my lamer friends for Christmas. I particularly loved the page on "Beer Breakfast." I like Zork's poetry and performance and my son says he gives a great poetry workshop, but, if I were a betting man, I would bet that Zork has made MUCH more money selling a great goofy book like this. It's sad that poetry isn't appreciated enough in our society [although I love seeing our Memphis Schools trying to change this], but I have to think that Zork writing this dumb book was a smart thing. It was the best $4 I ever spent in a bookstore.
-- Howard D.

An amusing little anthem to beer, and by implication, poetry
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-07
This is a charming little book. It's amusing to flip through, especially when one is utterly loop-de-looped. It's a good conversation-starter around the table in a pub, or at home. The models used on the cover are just absolutely stunning. They're the talented artist friends of the author: an eccentric, up-and-coming poet who is steadily making a name for himself in the poetry venues of NY and CT. So give it a try; buy the book! Support the arts! Support the arts! Support the arts!

Parodies
The Swiss Family Perelman
Published in Paperback by Penguin (Non-Classics) (1987-07-07)
Author: S. J. Perelman
List price: $6.95
New price: $214.02
Used price: $0.02
Collectible price: $10.97

Average review score:

Buy this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-18
Like most of the other stuff from the master, if you have a yen for humor with brains, please, please buy this book. A columnist for the New Yorker, screenplay writer for the Marx Brothers, humorist par excellence - do you need more reasons? How about the fact that he makes most other humorists look like college boys indulging in frat-house antics...

Buy and enjoy! And then, buy the rest of his oeuvre!!

My favorite travel book ever
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-30
Hilarious account of the year legendary humorist S. J. Perelman took his family (wife and two mid-sized children) on a trip around the world. A follow-up to the equally delightful "Westward, Ha!", his similar trip with illustrator Al Hirschfeld. They travel the South Seas and Asia, the Middle East and all over Europe, accumulating ever larger piles of impedimentia.

Every sentence sparkles with Perelman's unique and exquisite brand of "airy persiflage" (reassuring a threatening official of a tyranical oil company: "No muckraker I, I nervously assured him, but a vapid little tomtit writing elegiacs about temple bells and lepidoptera"). Not only funny, but a very interesting look at a the state of the world still readjusting itself from WWII. Heartily recommended.

Parodies
Tax the Rude, Not Me!
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Riptide Press (2000-04-15)
Authors: Sylva Zamchyn and Tom Dwyer
List price: $10.95
New price: $3.00
Used price: $0.99

Average review score:

Rude People Are Taxing!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-19
This book is funny as hell! I found myself laughing out loud as I immediately identified with the annoying situations described in the book. I'm glad this stuff doesn't just happen to me! As an accountant, the title enticed me into buying it, but I think everyone can relate to it. It's a collection of gripes for which clever tax names are assigned. One of the features of this book is how it reads. You read the name of the "tax", you read the description, you identify with it, and then the name becomes hilarious.

Some of my favorite taxes were the Conga Line Tax, the Premature Evacuation Tax, and the BYOB tax. I even came up with a few taxes of my own! Many of these "taxes" also heightened my awareness of what goes on behind the scenes in restaurants, doctors offices, and supermarkets, to name a few. I would definitely recommend this book. I think it also makes a great gift idea.

Hilarious, very clever collection of well-crafted observations.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-06
Tax The Rude, Not Me! is an hilarious, very clever collection of well-crafted observations of 568 "tax classifications" that would justifiable serve as "pay back" for stress causative idiots, morons, rascals and jerks that abound all around us in modern life. For example there is the Friend for Life Tax: Non-profit organizations that penalize you for making a contribution; you know they'll sell your name to other groups, so you'll be targeted for more appeals, forever. And then there's The Check's in the Mail Tax: Sellout politicians who make you wait longer and longer to enjoy your "golden years" by pushing back the eligibility age for Social Security benefits, hoping you're long dead before you can finally collect. Taken seriously, Tax The Rude, Not Me! could offer a blueprint for balancing the budget and paying off the national debt by year's end!

Parodies
Theory of Parody
Published in Hardcover by Methuen young books (1985-05)
Author: Linda Hutcheon
List price:
Used price: $24.78

Average review score:

Thoughtful and useful look at parody
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-14
Hutcheon's definition of parody is much broader than most, and I believe it is both fitting and useful. Parodic works, to Hutcheon, are not those which imitate at the expense of the parodied text (that's satire). Rather, they confront the past, and explore the difference between the parodied text and the present. As she writes, the pleasure comes from the degree of engagement of the viewer/listener in "intertextual bouncing" between the familiar and the new.

The book's premise is that parody is a genre fundamental to 20th century art forms. The works cited come from a wide range of disciplines, and are both modern and postmodern. The language is rather straight-forward and clear, a welcome diverson from many contemporary theorists. In fact, I found the book perhaps too repetitive, too focused on making a single point. Still, Hutcheon provides a thoughtful viewpoint from which to enjoy - and to make - art.

Parody: Creation and Re-Creation at once
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-28
kalinin@terra.com.br
Linda Hutcheon's A Theory of Parody is one of the most important theoretical books of the decade not only on parody but also on postmodernism. The dispute over the worth of postmodern art revolves around one of its most striking features, i.e. the outburst of intertextuality in the form of parody and pastiche. This proliferation of parody has been described as an exhaustion of creativity, appropriation of the property of others, borrowing, pirating, and cannibalisation; all of which descriptions are quite derogative. Parodists have, therefore, been considered minor artists, who take out their spite on acclaimed authors by ridiculing them. Linda Hutcheon's views on parody are far more positive and allows us to analyse contemporary writers and give them their due worth. She claims that postmodern parody has changed in its essentials when it became an imitation with critical distance. It is a highly sophisticated genre and has come to be almost an autonomous literary form. It is, in fact, a form of literary criticism. According to her, parody is "repetition with critical distance;" it is "stylistic confrontation," a modern re-coding which establishes "difference at the heart of similarity." In short, in order for one to criticise any modern work of art, I believe that her theory becomes an essential tool, since it enables us to establish the relations between the work of art and all the included references, allusions and quotations, and moreover, to discover the evaluative judgement the author expresses on both the parodied texts and on his/her own text. Hutcheon's theory on parody helps us understand better what happens to the quotation from a canonical text when it is transported into a postmodern text which uses fragmentation and irony to subvert the original meaning. Conversely, Parodies offer a dialogue and a re-evaluation of the past in the light of the present, and a critical view of present from the perspective of the past.

Parodies
This Dog'll Really Hunt
Published in Paperback by Republic of Texas (1999-04-25)
Author: Wallace O. Chariton
List price: $17.95
New price: $84.90
Used price: $2.04

Average review score:

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-16
This is a very funny book! Also check out Everything Texans Need To Know About The Other 49 States (Brook & Julie Syers).

Everyone Not a Texan Should Have One
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-05
One of the funniest books about sayings used in Texas that I have ever read. It is priceless!

Parodies
Today I Will Indulge My Inner Glutton: Health-Free Affirmations for Cynics
Published in Paperback by Prima Lifestyles (1999-08-30)
Authors: Ann Thornhill and Sarah Wells
List price: $9.95
New price: $6.00
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Why didn't I think of that.....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-17
Much like their first book, this is incredibly humorus. I was, at times, laughing out loud as I read it, cover to cover. Writing myself, I often wondered, "Why didn't I think of that?" A great pick-me-up for anyone. I have to say that my favorite was this: "I resent that other people's selfishness gets in the way of my own narcissim." Keep up the good work!

Another Winner!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-29
If you liked their first book, Today I Will Nourish My Inner Martyr, you'll love this one! A perfect gift book for anyone with a sense of humor who feels "staying physically fit" is overrated. Get the fudge out and enjoy!!

Parodies
The TORPOMETRONOMICON
Published in Paperback by Xenochrony Books (2007-06-01)
Author: Gary Clemenceau
List price: $17.99
New price: $11.19
Used price: $10.95

Average review score:

It impacted.com me with it's gravitas.com, both humor-wise and insightfulness-wise...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-10
Brilliant, bizarre, sardonic, hilarious. Imagine Mark Leyner, Thomas Pynchon, and Steve Martin forced to share a brain and work as copywriters and marketeers for an alternate-reality mid-century-retro IBM that somehow finds itself in the 90s.

If you are not dumb, and can read, this book is for you! Enjoy.

Monty Python's IT dept. meets The Onion on PRNewsWire
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-08
This book, like AcmeVaporware itself, is one of the most painfully hilarious non-sequitur doppelganger techno-apparitions to emerge from the Roaring Nineties. It's Monty Python's IT department meets The Onion on PRNewsWire in a fission/fusion reactor on meth on crack with a side of ham ("Hey, ham!"). Clemenceau continues to tear out corporate America's porcine, techno-black artificial heart and show the sputtering Jarvik kluge-networking-blob to its robotic victim -- um, in a really funny way. He even manages to lampoon the publishing industry's patented "logrolling" quote machine (see the riotously funny quotes on the back cover, along with the book's rule-breaking marketing blurb). Rampant sloth induction was never so much fun.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Movies-->Titles-->S-->Star Wars Movies-->Humor-->Parodies-->28
Related Subjects: Hardware Wars
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