callmemadam: (reading)
[personal profile] callmemadam
The Guardian's '1,000 novels everyone must read' is like an enormous book blog. Rather didactic in approach, it's naturally got people talking. Today I had a look at Comedy. I'm glad to see Evelyn Waugh, Kingsley Amis and Geoffrey Willans given their due, but where is Jane Austen? The introduction to the list rightly points out that comedy can have a serious purpose; can't a book be romantic and funny?

Stephen Moss (who he?) writes of Decline and Fall, ‘Waugh's bleak, amoral first novel is a young man's book, best read by young men (and perhaps the odd woman).’ That's me then, the odd woman, because I've read the book countless times and not just when I was young. Angela Thirkell is listed, hurrah! but an oddly chosen title, I thought: Before Lunch. ‘Published in 1939, Thirkell's irresistible comedy of manners is the most well-known of her Barsetshire series’. I wouldn't have thought that was true and it's not one of my favourites. What do other Thirkell fans think? Michael Frayn is rightly on the list but for Towards the End of the Morning (very funny) and not The Tin Men (even funnier). In fact, one of my favourite comic novels.



Any omissions/strange inclusions strike you?

Edit: I've just realised that Adrian Mole has been overlooked. Just his luck.

Date: 2009-01-20 09:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lurpak.livejournal.com
The world's hypocrisies and deceptions are targets that must be attacked, comedy the literary weapon of choice.

No Catch-22, and no Sue Townsend??

Date: 2009-01-21 09:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] callmemadam.livejournal.com
I keep meaning to say how much I love that icon!
Is it Carl Larsson? I used to have some prints of his work up in the kitchen.

I was outraged that Sue Townsend had been missed out but I now see that Adrian Mole is in the Family category.

Catch 22 would certainly seem a candidate for black comedy.

Date: 2009-01-21 10:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lurpak.livejournal.com
It's actually from a painting - Girl in the Kitchen - by Anna Ancher, a Danish artist who worked in Skagen. I can see the similarity between their work now you've mentioned him!

I am very glad Adrian Mole hasn't been overlooked :-)

Date: 2009-01-22 08:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] callmemadam.livejournal.com
Thank you! I'll look out for more by her, it's charming.

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