I love Dave Barry and Steve Martin and David sedaris but do they skew too old for my DCs?
Any suggestions? I guess I could check one out of the library and see if they like it, but I was hoping for a great surprise gift- Anyone? TIA |
I can’t imagine a Gen-Zer finding any of those funny. Especially Dave Barry, yikes. David Sedaris is starting to sound like a cranky old man to 40-something me, even. Maybe Cruel Shoes-era Steve Martin, but highly dependent on the reader. |
Far Side? I gave some to my older teens last Christmas and I keep finding them around the house. |
Confederacy of Dunces cracked me up in my 20’s |
Trevor Noah’s book is good. It’s funny but also a touching memoir of growing up mixed race in South Africa. |
Yes, it fascinating, even though I've wondered if it was 100% true. Even if it isn't, Trevor Noah certainly had a difficult and unique upbringing. I never understood why people like A Confederacy of Dunces. Sedaris is fine in small doses. My teen likes political cartoons. I think there's a NYT compendium of them. I also like the earlier Bill Bryson books, they're travel books with humor. Some of the essays in his book I'm A Stranger Here Myself are absolute gems. His latest book isn't quite as good. |
John Irving, especially The World According to Garp. |
Terry Pratchett's later novels:
Monstrous Regiment, about women in the army. Going Postal, about the invention of stamps. Making Money, about banking. |
I thought Armistad Maupin books were funny but I also like David Sedaris and am mid 40s. |
Why not? I have two teens who find them funny. They always crack up at Dave Barry's year-in-review articles. |
Born a Crime
Calvin and Hobbes or The Far Side America the book- by Colbert? |
Calvin & Hobbes holds up really, really well. |
Tina Fey’s memoir is great, and I think Colin Jost has one, too.
Carl Hiasson fiction books are funny. |
The five books in the trilogy The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. |
I was going say Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is classic comedy. But only the first book. It gets tedious by the last book. I read it in my 20's. |