I’m currently reading 3MiaB(tsnotd) by Jerome K. Jerome.
I had put this on my reading list, after having read another novel in which the author had repeatedly referred to 3MiaB as the funniest book of all time.
And the edition I have has an intro by Peter DeVries contending pretty much the same thing.
I wondered if any of you might be able to identify the novel I read in which the author sang the praises of 3MiaB.
Suffice it to say I do not share that author’s high opinion of this “comic masterpiece.”
I think this is a pretty tough question, so I expect one of the millions will post the answer in a matter of minutes.
I’m kicking myself.
Up until a couple of years ago, I used to keep a list of the books I read.
For various reasons (primarily laziness) I stopped doing that.
In situations such as this, it was a great help in trying to refresh my memory.
My vague recollection is that one character claimed this was the funniest book ever written, and another character either wasn’t buying that or was tired of hearing it.
I remember at one point one character asked (paraphrase), "Did you get to the part about the cheeses yet?"
Well, I passed that passage and more without injuring myself from uncontrollable laughter…
Man, that seems like it could have been it - seems really close to what I remembered, especially the bit where he asks if she “got to the bit about the cheeses.”
I listen to NPR pretty regularly. Tho I don’t remember any interview with this author, I may have noted the title after hearing something on the radio. Don’t think I’ve ever looked into that site.
On re-reading, looks like you can listen to the original broadcast. Blocked at work, but I’ll give it a try later.
“To Robert A. Heinlein, who, in Have Space Suit - Will Travel, introduced me to Jerome K. Jerome’s Three Men in a Boat.”
So, Heinlein’s novel also references Jerome’s work. Basically, it’s the protagonist’s father’s favorite work, and there is at least one scene in which the father is reading out loud from it.
Heinlein mentioned it in another of his works, but I don’t remember which one.
After reading Connie Willis’s book, I got hold of Three Men. Found it amusing but not productive of belly laughs. It is so much a product of its time, it’s hard to appreciate it, and how ground-breaking it was in its day. The rise of and intrusion of the middle class into territory previously mostly occupied by the privileged classes, if I recall the introduction correctly. (But might not, as it was a long time ago that I read it.)
Don’t think I read any Heinlein lately, so I’m still not sure where I heard of this book.
But I do know that I stopped trying to wade through it last night.
Whatever its impact may have been at one time, at present, this reader found it spectacularly unfunny.
I think it’s very amusing with a few LOL moments, in much the same vein as Jeeves & Wooster, but not everything is for everyone. You gave it a whirl, no one can ask for more.
Sorry, I can’t help, but if a character said that book was the funniest ever, I’d immediately pinpoint him/her as the murderer. I, too, read it after the piece on NPR, and hated it. It seemed just up my alley of silly, absurd humor. I did laugh at the tinned pineapple scene, but didn’t even crack a smile through the rest of the book.