Recommend me a ligh...
 

MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
We will be in touch

[Closed] Recommend me a light hearted funny novel please!!!

44 Posts
40 Users
0 Reactions
115 Views
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

In the search for a few novels to put on the Christmas list, gonna go and check some more out in the book store tomorrow. I like light hearted easy to read stuff. Nothing too long (over 300 pages-ish), no microscopic writing, and one thing I HATE is too many comma's. If there's comma's every five words or so I find it really hard to read.

A few I've really liked over the last year or two are Charlotte street by Danny Wallace, Ghosts and Lightning by Trevor Byrne, and just recently a Touch of Love by Cameron Coe, (That one was probably the biggest effort to read out of all of them but still some nice parts to it).

Thanks all!


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:33 pm
Posts: 33532
Full Member
 

Well, if you can hack something that will teach you stuff, as well as having you giggling like an idiot, I can recommend, without hesitation, pretty much anything by Bill Bryson. A very funny writer indeed.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:36 pm
Posts: 677
Free Member
 

Chris brookmyres stuff


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:36 pm
Posts: 77692
Free Member
 

Chris brookmyres stuff

+1.

Douglas Adams.
Terry Pratchett.
Robert Rankin.
Jasper Fforde.
Tom Holt.
Robert Asprin.

For starters.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:37 pm
Posts: 4892
Full Member
 

The Bible


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:37 pm
Posts: 8527
Free Member
 

Brookmyre +2 and anything by John Niven.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:39 pm
Posts: 362
Free Member
 

The restraint of beasts


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:40 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

alexi sayle's books /novels are funny --if you like his style of course....


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:41 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Cooking with Fernet Branca
Amazing Disgrace
Rancid Pansies

All by James Hamilton Paterson

Central character is a hack writer of celebrity biographies who goes in for curious but entirely plausible culinary experiments (liver smoothies and badger wellington are two of the more palatable examples).

Very cynical, very odd, very funny.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:46 pm
Posts: 7129
Full Member
 

Lighthearted, but not laugh-out-loud funny

[url= http://ignitebooks.co.uk/products-page/joolz-denby-books/the-curious-mystery-of-miss-lydia-larkin-and-the-widow-marvell/ ]Joolz Denby[/url]

I love Bill Bryson, Tom Sharpe and David Lodge for funny.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:48 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Brookmyre +1

And most of John O'Farrell's work is pretty readable - The Best a Man Can Get, May Contain Nuts, This is Your Life.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 7:49 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Brookmyre+1

I also really enjoyed Mike Gayle novels, especially Mr Commitment - youthful nostalgia and how funny relationships between a couple can be.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:07 pm
Posts: 97
Full Member
 

"The Passage" by Justin Cronin.

Its not exactly your spec but its a good read.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:08 pm
Posts: 50252
Free Member
 

Bryson, Fforde, Pratchett, Adams, all very good pointers.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:40 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I'm not sure how to spell it;

the kurran.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:43 pm
Posts: 65992
Full Member
 

Brookmyre is funny but more dark-hearted than lighthearted I reckon 😆


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:46 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

another +1 for brookmyre

just finished 'shit my dad says' by justin halpern which i've had for a while but never got round to it as i never fancied it but it's one of the few books that genuinely had me in tears


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:49 pm
Posts: 13356
Free Member
 

The best light hearted funny novel I've ever read is 'Pest Control' by Bill Fitzhugh. A comedy of errors, ****in brilliant.
A mate of mine has a 2nd hand bookshop & he reckons he can't get enough copies of it.

EDIT, 'Shit My Dad Says' is also hilarious!


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:50 pm
 igrf
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I used to get moments of eye streaming laughter from some Tom Sharpe novels, Riotous assembly springs to mind, but there are a few others, something Wilt as I recall.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:53 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

can't believe i forgot 'riotous assembly'.
konstable els is one of the greatest comic creations ever - genius!


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:56 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Spike Milligan's war memoirs are just packed full of stuff that makes me shoot coffee through my nose, halfway across the room.....


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:56 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

50 Shades of Grey 😳 8)

When you get over the shock of the first book, Anastasia's "inner goddess" is hilarious. 😆


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 8:58 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The humour is dark rather than light-hearted but John Niven's Kill Your Friends is the funniest novel I've read in years.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 9:06 pm
Posts: 6283
Full Member
 

Any of the Latin American Trilogy by Louis De Bernieres:

The War Of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts
Senor Viva And The Coca Lords
The Troublesome Offspring Of Cardinal Guzman

Superb books, touching, funny, exceptionally well written. I'd say he's my favourite author by a long shot.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 9:12 pm
Posts: 2661
Free Member
 

Try Jumping Ships by David Baboulene.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 9:18 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

anything by John Niven

The humour is dark rather than light-hearted but John Niven's Kill Your Friends is the funniest novel I've read in years.

The one about Jesus, God and smoking dope (same author) was also pretty good - awesome books.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 9:19 pm
Posts: 146
Full Member
 

Carl Hiassen.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 9:38 pm
 ezzy
Posts: 47
Free Member
 

Carl Hiasesn, Tom Sharpe and the Rise and Fall of Reginald Perrin by David Nobbs.


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 10:19 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

This is brilliant - particularly if you are a child of the 70s:

http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/41038.The_Rotters_Club


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 11:12 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Funny, dark, a bit twisted - well, it is Scandinavian:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Hundred-Year-Old-Man-Climbed-Window-Disappeared/dp/1843913720


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 11:16 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

If you remember the eighties and had any interest in video games then this is great. More comic thriller than purely light hearted but it's a fun read nevertheless.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 06/12/2012 11:52 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Thanks for all the suggestions folks, gonna make my way into the book shop now and check some of them out.


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 1:54 pm
 IHN
Posts: 19877
Full Member
 

Ben Aaranovitch (sp?) Rivers of London series.


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 2:04 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I'm prepared to bet my house* on the fact you haven't posted this on LFGSS...

😉

*wendy house. Out the back. Needs some work.


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 2:11 pm
Posts: 2350
Full Member
 

Bill Bryson , A walk in the woods or The life and times of the thunderbolt kid . 😆


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 2:22 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Absurdistan 🙂


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 2:27 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Milk, suplhate and Alby Starvation by Martin Millar.

Easily one of the funniest books I've ever read.


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 2:41 pm
 DezB
Posts: 54367
Free Member
 

Ardal O'Hanlan's book is great [url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Talk-Town-Ardal-OHanlon/dp/0340748583/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1354891459&sr=8-3 ]here[/url]. Seems to be the only one he's ever written though.

If "The missing link between Dick Emery and Bret Easton Ellis" appeals - [url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/Full-Whack-Charlie-Higson/dp/034912177X/ref=sr_1_19?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1354891854&sr=1-19 ]Charlie Higson[/url]. He seems to have gone into "books for teens"...


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 2:53 pm
Posts: 28550
Free Member
 

Wind the clock back and start with some vintage PG Wodehouse. Proper laugh out loud stuff*.

*Subjectively speaking, of course.


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 2:54 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Okay, some of those authors were NOT light hearted 😐 . There was a couple of sci fi writers in there and a crime writer. There was me walking around the general fiction section wondering why I couldn't find them until I asked lol. I'm not really into that kind of writing.


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 7:00 pm
Posts: 920
Free Member
 

PG Wodehouse +1


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 7:12 pm
Posts: 920
Free Member
 

and I've always been told Pickwick Papers is great, it's on my list. You can get it for free digitally as it's out of copyright.


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 7:14 pm
Posts: 12079
Full Member
 

Wind the clock back and start with some vintage PG Wodehouse.

And while you're there, Sake. Wonderfully twisted and dark short stories, very funny.


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 7:18 pm
Posts: 12079
Full Member
 

Edit: double post?


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 7:18 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I found "Rocket Boys" by Homer Hickman in a charity shop and really enjoyed it, a light hearted and amusing true story. In short, its 1957, mid west US, Hickman is a teenager is obssessed with space and rockets, set up a rocket club at school, sets of rockets with varying success. Hickamn goes on to work at NASA. I think its been reissued as "October Sky"

http://www.amazon.co.uk/October-Sky-Homer-Hickam/dp/185702995X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1354909062&sr=1-1

When I need some comedy, I normally read Tom Sharpe, PG Wodehouse or Joseph Connolly. All much the same to be honest, British farce sort of thing but Connolly does have darker bits. Try "SOS", "Summer Things" and "Winter Breaks" for starters

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Joseph-Connolly/e/B001HOZHC4/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1


 
Posted : 07/12/2012 7:41 pm