A great funny book is one of the simplest pleasure we get in life of bookworms. But finding the real stand-outs is never as easy. But forget about world problems and and indulge in some of the greatest rib-ticklers ever written, laugh as loud as you can. Some says the funniest book is all you need when life has been difficult and here is our list of most funniest books ever written. So just get a nice place for yourself and choose one of the book from the list below, and stress out.
HERE IS THE LIST OF THE BEST FUNNY BOOKS EVER WRITTEN.
1) I Can't Date Jesus: Love, Sex, Family, Race and Other Reasons I've Put My Faith In Beyonce by Michael Arceneaux
Growing up black and gay in Houston, Texas, writer Arceneaux had to learn to accept himself in a world that wanted him to change. In his debut book, he touches on everything from coming out to his mom to how he almost ended up in the priesthood.
2) Me Talk Pretty One day by David Sedaris
Any of Sedaris’s fantastic books could’ve made this list, but this one’s titular story (about the author’s attempt to learn French after moving to Paris) puts it over the edge.
From one of our favorite writers of all time, a candid and dryly funny look at women who are aging and dealing with all the stuff that goes along with it.
4) The Misadventures of Awkward Black Girl by Issa RaeIn this book named after her popular web series, Rae writes about what it’s like to balance being an introvert (read: kinda weird) with being black.
5) Love in A Cold Climate by Nancy Mitford This irresistible melange of love, family, sexuality and reads like the unbelievable creation of a bored housewife, while the impact is made in the gulf that exists between what people are thinking and what they are saying.
Jim Jackers was hard at work on the pro bono ads and had been working on them steadily for a few hours, since his return from helping Chris Yop throw his chair into Lake Michigan. Looking up from the blank page to the blinking clock, he discovered it was only three-fifteen. He decided that today was perhaps the longest day of his life. Not only had he been called an idiot to his face, but he could do nothing to counter that opinion, because he couldn't come up with even a single funny thing to say about breast cancer.
This collection of Brooker's TV columns from the Guardian is swimming in bile and he succeeds brilliantly in skewering all that is anodyne on our TV screens while describing some of the offenders wonderfully well.
White Teeth’s subtle humour is found in the mundane flaws and absurd fates of two multicultural families as they navigate the complex realities of race, roots and religion in post-war London. She makes light work of heavy topics throughout her debut novel, a feat made all the more astounding by the fact she wrote it at the age of 18.
-BOOKS YOU CAN FINISH QUICKLY