![]() ![]() ![]() These are the most laugh-out-loud audiobooks of all time. That said, occasionally, a book will get to me, and I find it much easier to laugh when I hear it out loud rather than reading it off a cold, dead page. The advantage is judges are vetted and nearly all have decades of audiobook listening experience on which to base their opinions. It begins in 1996 and is conveniently separated by genre. Though I’ve spent much of my "career" as a comedian attempting to make people laugh with words, a book often feels stale, dry, and at best, more winsome than funny. For an experienced evaluation, check the APA list of annual Audie Award winners. It’s more rare to find myself laughing from books I’ve read. If you didn’t know anything about Plath, and you read a book about a woman toying with the idea of suicide after spending a month in a hellish internship program in New York City, and ultimately deciding suicide is not the answer… isn’t that what dark comedy is supposed to do? To walk right up to the worst subjects in life and thumb your nose at them? Regardless of plot, the acerbic narrator's observations sound more like Larry David than Virginia Woolf. For instance, I laugh every time I read Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar. I guffaw at extremely sad and poignant moments in movies. I’m not the first person to point out that humor is like porn: what works for me may not work for you. I often find myself laughing at stuff others don’t find funny. ![]()
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