Syllabi

Comic Novels

Nabokov urged us to read with our spines, to savor the tingle that the best writing brings. I tell the students in my comic-novel seminar to read with their funny bones. (Unfortunately, my suggestion that they mark the first point at which they chuckled audibly led to a paralyzing, nearly class-wide self-consciousness.) You won’t find Lucky Jim or A Confederacy of Dunces on this syllabus, for the simple fact that, despite their virtues, they’ve never made me laugh out loud the way the following titles always do, even after multiple readings, when nothing should surprise me.

Diary of a Nobody by George and Weedon Grossmith

More than a century old, Diary still succeeds because its fictional creator, Charles Pooter, is permanently modern in his precise status anxiety, the trivia he chooses to immortalize, and the misconception that he tells good jokes: “November 1: My entry yesterday about ‘retired tired,’ which I did not notice at the time, is rather funny. If I were not so worried just now, I might have had a little joke about it.”

Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit by P. G. Wodehouse

That this utterly congenial 1954 novel is not generally picked as one of the essential Jeeves and Wooster titles makes me like it even more. Nightclubs, mystery novelists, impromptu cat burglary, and much more fill this tightly plotted yet breezy book. (In the United States, it was published as Bertie Wooster Sees It Through—worth checking out for Wodehouse’s three-page dedication poking fun at the art of the dedication.)

10th Grade by Joseph Weisberg

My students don’t quite believe me when I tell them that the run-on sentences of Weisberg’s high school–age protagonist extend the modernist fictional project. Additional proof: Weisberg has given his narrator Bloomsday for a birthday.

Crippled Detectives by Lee Tandy Schwartzman

Nonstop action, fun-house logic, and dreamworld transitions—all by a seven-year-old author.

The Dog of the South by Charles Portis

As if it’s not enough that Portis nails the voice of the easily distracted, perpetually pedantic Ray Midge, he gives us another perfectly conceived comic creation in the same book: Dr. Reo Symes, a man with a shady past and outsize, undying, ludicrous schemes. The interaction of their sensibilities bears the postmark: Comedy Heaven.

Love Creeps by Amanda Filipacchi

Unlike Filipacchi’s first two (also enchanting) novels, the prose here is deliberately as flat as an instruction manual. The simple, “logical” language allows her to create a world that bears a passing resemblance to contemporary New York, while generating ever more intricate and unreal comic scenarios. By the time we realize how far we’ve traveled, there’s no turning back.



Ed Park is a founding editor of The Believer and the author of Personal Days (Random House, 2008), a finalist for the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award. He teaches at Columbia University.