Humor Books
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Nashville in a nutshell - Entertaining and thoughtfulReview Date: 2008-06-03
Superb!Review Date: 2008-06-03
Funny Nashville travelogue! Review Date: 2008-06-03
Beautiful! Could not stop reading it once I started!Review Date: 2008-06-03
Very Nice! I loved the Symbolism in snowflakesReview Date: 2008-06-03

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GoodReview Date: 2007-01-12
worth every penny!Review Date: 2002-06-06
one of my favorites.
a treasure.
Very InspiringReview Date: 2003-10-31
A powerful memoir and personal account of hopeReview Date: 2003-04-14
Poignant and BeautifulReview Date: 2006-05-18

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a really good novelReview Date: 2008-07-17
Farce for the agesReview Date: 2008-07-02
Jack Worthing and his irreponsible friend, Algernon, both pretend to be named Earnest as they pursue love with Gwendolen Fairfax and Cecily Cardew.
When the four lovers visit Jack's country home at the same time, the proverbial s**t his the fan. But never fear, a convienient twist resolves matters to everyone's satisfaction.
Stupidity has never been so witty and intelligent!Review Date: 2008-05-07
I have never seen play nor movie of this, though I would like to, for this script is something that demands to be put into action. Satire usually has, since the Greeks. It's funny, witty, and smart, despite that the characters are among the dumbest, silliest people you will hopefully never have the opportunity to meet.
"The Importance of Being Ernest" is quick, biting, and a great, entertaining read.
An Earnest ClassicReview Date: 2008-02-04
Best play I've ever readReview Date: 2007-05-27

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A light and warm must readReview Date: 2008-01-30
"It was the annual January thaw, nature's way of arousing false hopes and tempting the good people of Lake Wobegon to let lown their guard and not wear a scarf so that nature can kill them. A form of natural selection to reduce the optimist population and promote the survival of embittered stoics who believe that fate is against them. Which it is.
The thaw means that snow on the roof melts and freezes on the overhang of the eaves, forming a dam to back up the water so it can get under the shingles and freeze and gradually rip our house apart, which is nature's goal, to obliterate us. Nature is not benevolent towards us, it wants us out of here. It's good to know this. In summer, you can almost believe otherwise.
Luckily, summer is soon over. As it turns cold, our mood improves. we're excited. Cold is a stimulant. So is danger. It's good to have nature to deal with. That's why self-pity declines in the fall. People don't sit around and anguish over what to do with their lives. Instinct tells you. You're a mammal. Stay warm. Stay close to the food supply. Shovel the roof. Make babies. Make a few extra in case the wolves get one. And then on a cold night in January, you walk out in the moon light and agsinst all reason, beyodn all expectation, you're utterly happy."
In addition to Keillor's down-to-earth story telling this book contains wonderful photography by Richard Olsenius. I actually bought this book because I am a fan of photojounalistic photograghy. Great writing and great photography, a bookshelf is incomplete without this volume.
A new addiction ;)Review Date: 2003-12-09
I really enjoyed reading this book and I would recommend this book to anyone who has vast, little, or no knowledge of Lake Wobegon.
Excellent book!Review Date: 2003-12-09
I really enjoyed reading this book and I would recommend this book to anyone who has vast, little, or no knowledge of Lake Wobegon.
Nostalgia at its "Best"Review Date: 2003-02-08
The composition of the shots are superb. The short prologue gives a first person retelling of how Keillor invented the town that "time forgot and the decades cannot improve." That introduction, however, is so short that it's almost unfair to say that this is a Garrison Keillor book. He essentially wrote the foreword (although it's not titled that way), and the pictures tell the real story.
My only disappointment is that there isn't any color. Certainly sepia tones give us nostalgia the way we'd like to remember it, but sunset on a farm is something you can't appreciate in shades of brown. Rural life has its monochromatic moments, to be sure, but there's enough color and life to help us remember that not everything is nostalgia.
This gripe doesn't detract from the beauty of this book, though. Thankfully we never see Lake Wobegon, only hints and shadows. It allows us to preserve our preconceptions, but gives us a deeper feeling of connection with the area. If you're a fan of APHC, you probably already own this book (or you should). If not, take a look at a lifestyle that might be foreign to you.
Land of LakesReview Date: 2003-02-03
"Culture isn't decor, it's what you know before you're twelve. It sticks with you all your born days. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree. You can try to wrestle free of it, like those geese who trail the V-formation, trying to look as if they aren't part of this bunch, as if flying south were a personal decision on their part, but your feint towards independence only makes it clearer who you really are. Some people like hot dish better if it's called cassoulet, or pot roast if it's pot-au-feu. Fine. Suit yourself. Same difference."
Whatever you call those culinary delights, you'll like this book. Come see Father Kleinschmidt's Annual Blessing of the Snowmobiles. Ja, you betcha! Reviewed by TundraVision.

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An absorbing collection of short stories.Review Date: 2008-02-06
EloquentReview Date: 2007-12-01
A very good readReview Date: 2007-11-23
Nice tales, well told.Review Date: 2007-11-23
A great collection of storiesReview Date: 2007-11-18

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great purchaseReview Date: 2007-03-17
If Laughter is the Best Medicine, Foxtrot is the PillReview Date: 2007-02-17
The FoxTrot folks are a great family, one we sort of got used to checking up on every day, so we took the news that Mr. Amend was going to cease daily distribution of his wonderfully funny people and turn his strip to Sunday only, with a bit of sadness. Still, we have these terrific FoxTrot books to keep us going with our FoxTrot fix. Mr. Amend is to be commended for his great gift to our culture and his great gift to so many lives. I truly believe a laugh a day, helps keep the blues away and the FoxTrot gang are always good for a laugh. Heck there are a lot of laughs in the FoxTrot books. I know, I have them all and I am, along with my girls and my hubby dear, eagerly awaiting the next one.
Oh yes, I forgot to mention, we don't have an iguana, but my girls do have a pet gecko and, you guessed it, his name is Quincy.
Jam-Packed FoxTrot. Foxtrot, All Great!Review Date: 2007-01-19
Like many of Mr. Amend's fans I'm a bit disappointed he's switching his strip to Sunday-only, but fortunately I can still read him daily in the Foxtrot books. Get them one and all and you can keep right on a laughing.
The regular good stuffReview Date: 2007-09-29
The Fox Family RulesReview Date: 2007-03-08

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Corporate Executives of America Beware!Review Date: 2004-02-12
If the first names of the CEOs of your former employers are Joe, or Bernie, and have recently been Indicted by the Justice Department, you should read this book. As Jimmy Buffet once said, "If we don't laugh, we'll all go insane!" A truly sarcastic and humorous work of art.
So Funny, So True!Review Date: 2003-10-10
JJ's Business Bullets: Why Businesses Suck and What We Can DReview Date: 2003-10-06
Read and enjoy. Get ready to laugh. Get ready to act on and advocate for change in corporate America!! Nomatter what your situation, I believe you will find many things in the book applicable to you.
Thanks Mr. Talbott for your honesty and realness in addressing this issue!! Please write some more!!
Misery Loves CompanyReview Date: 2003-10-01
If you are a public speaker, steal from this book. If you are a consultant, quote from this book. If you are a working stiff like me, read this book and laugh and remember what Mama says, "Misery loves company."
It's better to laugh than cry!!!!Review Date: 2003-09-12
Mr. Talbott utilizes a swift and humorous pen to teach and entertain page after page. Unfortunately or fortunately we have all been through a variety of what Talbott depicts, now we have the solace to sit back and have a laugh about it!
Take the bullets out of the chamber, iron your shirt and don't forget your briefcase and this book on your way to your nine to five! Thanks Mr. Talbott!

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Philosophy AND Jokes - What more could you want?Review Date: 2000-04-13
Deeply intellectual understanding of modern realityReview Date: 2005-02-27
"Once a perverse Jewish young man in a small village in Poland enjoyed his role as apikoros [see appendix].
The joke ends with:
"I see," said the older man. "Let me tell you: I'm an apikoros; you're a goy."
The last five years have not been kind to public intellectuals who share the annoying attitude of the people observing modern life who "have the stance of an outsider, and the soul of a critical student. A tendency to laugh at absurdity and to traffic in jokes exploiting this tendency are constituents in American laughter generally, I think, and may well have their own sources there, but surely they have been abetted by the infiltration of Jewish humor."
Philosophically, I find that modern life generally ignores the ability of philosophers to refute common assumptions, but people have their own form of upmanship which consists of flipping out epistemic modalities like September 11, presidential leadership, or the triumph of free economies to justify their lack of awareness of any long-term consequences of grandiose missions and dubious crusades: to the moon, to Mars (the god of war beacons), to Baghdad, to the Chinese embassy (was May 7-8, 1999 in Belgrade too recent to get a joke in this book?). As the system works, people who know a lot of jokes are sure to guess the profession of the guys walking past a woman who say:
"Man, Id like to screw her," said one of the *******.
His companion answered, "Yeah? Out of what?"
Given the nature of professional ethics, the second of the two men might be considered more professional, more interested in the economic possibilities for financial rewards, than the first, while the first is merely reflecting years of absorbing modern entertainment values or male chauvinist pigishness (take your choice). Since impeachment proceedings in 1999 were dominating the jokes which the public were hearing at the time, this book was riding on a crest of awareness that some professions need complicated rules about what you can say after you swear to tell the truth. The president would have surprised everyone back in 1992 on "Sixty Minutes" after the Super Bowl if he had said, "If I had to choose between telling the truth or lying my ass off, I'd pick Gennifer Flowers." That is easier to understand than all the is meanings in the world of doubletalk that professional mindbending encourages when faced with specific questions about allegations of infidelity.
The 24 hour day puts strains on everyone's relations with each other, best illustrated by the line in "Get Off My Cloud" by the Rolling Stones in which an anonymous voice on the phone complains:
"It's 3 a.m., there's too much noise. Don't you people ever want to go to bed?"
The key word here, you, can be looked up in the index of joke beginnings and punch lines in this book to find a joke with an exchange at 3 a.m. which ends with:
"For God's sake, Abe, you don't have to get up in the morning."
With characters named Abe and Sarah, this joke could have some relevance to a society growing much older than anyone is used to, and doctors who dare to inform patients when their number comes up and they have a duty to die, but our society keeps pretending that it has not reached that stage yet. More likely our society thinks of itself as being more like the joke in the Introduction which ends with:
"Of course they take bribes." (p. 9).
maybe i'm biased, i dunno...Review Date: 2002-04-02
buy that book!!
Very good intro to humor studiesReview Date: 2002-05-06
Cohen doesn't fall into this standard academic rap, and so his arguments were a novelty.
I especially enjoyed the joke based on Niels Abel's commutative groups, as I didn't realize that mathematicians had a sense of humor that was parlayed into such odd and exquisite visions.
The ending was an attempt to take on the morality of joking in an age in which almost everyone is offended by everything from dust to sun-rises. While Cohen says go ahead and be offended, he also says to not try to outlaw other people's sense of humor. I felt he set up a Catch-22 that needed more work. On what basis is it reasonable to be offended?
Is it ever reasonable?
Unfortunately, the book ended in this snag of ook after seventy good pages building a model of the joke-work as a mode of appreciation. To end with the Maoist stalemate that has held culture in a quagmire of contention was less than cheering, not that I myself know any way out of that quagmire of ooky skook.
Thank heavens jokes live on. Some of these are really unusual, and Cohen's commentary is always scintillating. Bravo! I am tickled that this book was written and published. Everyone in America should have a heavily annotated copy under their pillow and we would begin to have a civilization worthy of the zig-zags and ziggurats of the star-bellied Sneetches.
-- Kirby Olson, Author
Comedy after Postmodernism
I Wish I Had Bought It!Review Date: 2000-08-27

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Just my type of humorReview Date: 2008-07-13
Besides the bountiful collection wonderful four pane commic there's a few treats like the manifesto, kawii-o-scope and a short story.
As an added bonus, I find that the way the book is constructed lends itself nicely to turning each commic into a postcard. My friends love recieving them.
I'd recommend this as a gift to anyone over 13, seeing as some references and wording are a more adult.
If you want to get an idea of what the humor is like, Ms. Murphy has constructed a website: [...]. Most of what you see there is also in the book. I hope you enjoy!
HILARIOUS!! and OH SO CUTE!Review Date: 2008-05-29
randomly found this in a book store & started flipping through it and i couldn't put it down! I love the (sometimes) inappropiate humor...but it definitely says the things I'm sure some of us think of! :)
Showed it off at my office & my friends LOVE it too!! We're picking up more copies so they have their own...
Looking forward to another collection! (HOPEFULLY SOON!!)
The best gift everReview Date: 2008-04-22
Wicked Cute!Review Date: 2008-04-19
Perfect Cubicle AdditionReview Date: 2008-04-22
I love the way it props up even though the cover gives me a bit of trouble sometimes. It's a great book to share.

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About Time for a Selected . . .Review Date: 2000-05-12
Ms Duhamel not only deconstucts Barbie but all AmericaReview Date: 1999-05-17
Release from ConformityReview Date: 2000-01-23
It's a STITCH!Review Date: 2002-05-16
ExcellentReview Date: 1999-04-29
Related Subjects: Food and Drink Science Computer Animals Subcultures Relationships Bizarre Useless Pages Parenting Weird Graphics Gardening Musical Job-Related Laws Sports Advice Medical Education Celebrities Jokes Archives Satire Interactive Poetry Pranks Wordplay Parodies Magazines and E-zines Audio and Video Clips
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