Best of
Comedy

1964

Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb Shooting Script


Stanley Kubrick - 1964
    Strangelove Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb from 1964.

American Lit Relit


Richard Armour - 1964
    You may even learn something. Richard Armour, that madcap-and-gown satirist, goes his merry way from such Puritan authors as Michael Wigglesworth and Cotton Mather to such not-so-Puritan authors as O'Neill, Hemingway, and Faulkner. Sense and nonsense play a wild game of tag, having a field day in a field often approached to solemnly. The author gives his special kind of literate humor by combining word play, understatement, exaggeration, parody, free association, and irony. The survey course in American literature will never be the same.

A Confederate General from Big Sur


Richard Brautigan - 1964
    Having grown up near Big Sur, this book was particularly funny as Lee Mellon is still in residence there. Brautigan's descriptions of drugs, drinks, frogs & the commas of Ecclesiastes are all done in a straightforward style. A favorite paragraph: "He broke the seal on the bottle, unscrewed the cap & poured a big slug of whiskey into his mouth. He swallowed it down with a hairy gulp. Strange, for as I said before: he was bald." A great read. If there's one thing the world lacks, it's a good supply of well-written, funny-as-heck books. Luckily, aside from A Confederacy Of Dunces, we have this little gem. The characters are drunks, druggies, skanks, prostitutes & nutzoids. The pace is brisk, the imagry vivid. Most of it seemed to be part of my own life, but just where do you find weed that's so potent that 4 people smoking 5 joints stay high for well over 2 hours?If you want to spend a day or night having a good laugh over a great book, pick this one up. You'll laugh out loud. As Martha Stewart says, "it's a good thing".

We're Right Behind You, Charlie Brown


Charles M. Schulz - 1964
    

What next Andy Capp


Reg Smythe - 1964
    Will the REAL Andy Capp please stand up? Never mind, he's under the table, along with all the millions of readers around the world who have laughed themselves insensible at the antics of this sly, surly, Capptivating ne'er-do-well.

Giles Cartoons: Eighteenth Series (Giles Annual, #18)


Giles - 1964