Comic novel





A comic novel is a novel-length work of humorous fiction. Many well-known authors have written comic novels, including P. G. Wodehouse, Henry Fielding, Mark Twain, and John Kennedy Toole.




Contents






  • 1 Notable authors of comic novels


    • 1.1 British


    • 1.2 Irish


    • 1.3 American




  • 2 See also


  • 3 References





Notable authors of comic novels



British


One of the most notable of British comic novelists is P. G. Wodehouse, whose work follows on from that of Jerome K. Jerome, George Grossmith, and Weedon Grossmith (see Diary of a Nobody).


Saki's work is also significant, although his career was cut short by World War I.


A. G. Macdonell and G. K. Chesterton also produced flights of whimsy.


Henry Fielding's The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling was a notable mid-18th century work in the genre.


More contemporary British humorists are George MacDonald Fraser, Tom Sharpe, Kingsley Amis, Terry Pratchett, Richard Gordon, Rob Grant, Douglas Adams, Evelyn Waugh, Nick Hornby, Helen Fielding, Eric Sykes, Leslie Thomas, Stephen Fry, Richard Asplin, Mike Harding, Joseph Connolly, and Ben Elton.



Irish


James Joyce's Ulysses is considered by some to be a comic novel.[1]



American


Notable American comic novelists include Mark Twain, Philip Roth, John Kennedy Toole, James Wilcox, John Swartzwelder, Larry Doyle, Jennifer Weiner, Carl Hiaasen, Joseph Heller, Peter De Vries, Kurt Vonnegut, Terry Southern, and Christopher Moore.



See also




  • Comedy

  • Fiction



References





  1. ^ Bowen, Zack. Ulysses as a comic novel. Syracuse University Press, 1989.













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