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Humorous SciFi
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Starship Grifters
Out of the Soylent Planet (A Rex Nihilo Adventure)
The Chicolini Incident
The Wrath of Cons
The Yanthus Prime Job: A Pepper Melange Novella


Robert Sheckley wrote some dark humor. Animal Farm is, of course, satire, a form of humor, and has some moments that elicit a certain kind of laugh.
I will be following this thread!

Tchaikovsky's One Day All This Will Be Yours.

I updated my above post to show the links to each. I love them. They are a very tongue-in-cheek take on Star Wars (mostly) and other sci-fi tropes. Think: "What if Han Solo had to hang out with C-3PO as a co-pilot instead of Chewbacca?"

Thanks!"
It's pretty short, but I thought Walking to Aldebaran was pretty humorous and quite enjoyable. :)


A good deal of the rest of de Camp's science fiction and fantasy contains moments of humor, or satire, although most are not exactly comical.

https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/5...
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/4...

Bored of the Rings: A Parody of J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings

My leaning is toward the SciFi side - my long dormant interest in science is getting rekindled and I enjoy Douglas Adams takes on scientific and technological ideas.
But I do like a funny book, whatever the genre!


The William Shakespeare Star Wars books, especially the ones recorded on audiobook (whoever voiced Han Solo is good, plus so is the rest of the cast.) The three from the original movies are all on audiobook for sure, by Ian Doescher
Red Shirts is even written as a comedy, so if you've ever watched Classic Trek or a number of other scifi TV shows, that's one you may like as well. Others I first thought of have been mentioned above.
Oh, wait, here's one I thought funny that I heard on audiobook:
Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers in the Red Dwarf series, by Grant Naylor They may all be funny to most of his fans, but I liked the first one the best.

The William Shakespeare Star Wars books, especially the ones recorded on audiobook (whoever voiced Han Solo is g..."
Karin, I love those books! I even bought my son his own set of them.

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Try Laumer Keith's Retief series of stories and novellas on a diplomat of Corps Diplomatique Terrestienne - a different kind of humor that Adams', but fun.
I also enjoyed Strange Practice by Vivian Shaw - a kind of humorous urban semi-paranormal (as in, vampires, ghouls etc are all normal, natural beings) mystery. Actually, there is a trilogy of those. (Incidentally, Ms. Shaw is a spouse of another very interesting author, Arkady Martine. Her works, however, are not humorous.)
If you lean on satirical side, Stanislav Lem is your man. Try The Cyberiad, Tales of Pirx the Pilot, The Futurological Congress: From the Memoirs of Ijon Tichy...
Then there is Sector General series by James White - Beginning Operations omnibus might be a good place to start.
One of the lists here reminded me of probably the most humorous among Vorkosigan saga novels: Captain Vorpatril's Alliance.

Thanks!"
Try [author:Laumer Keith|546..."
I am really enjoying this series. The first time I read it, I read Falling Free first, which I really liked, and so was a bit disappointed with Shards of Honour. This time I read Shards of Honour first and am going to give it 4 stars. I am reading them more in order of chronology, so just started Barrayar last night (my library only has them together in Cordelia's Honour) which is perfect because I really wanted the next story.
Yes, I am enjoying the space opera aspects of it. I lean more to space opera and less to hard core scifi now, whereas from ages 10-16ish I liked both equally (and not kiddie stuff for the most part--but some--hanks to a precocious reading friend).

The tone of various novels (and novellas) varies pretty significantly. I started long ago with one of the darker ones, novella Borders of Infinity, and then during the first wave of the lockdown read them all in internal chronological order, except for Vorkosigan-free Falling Free which I read last.
I found (even more than usual) lightweight tone of Captain Vorpatril's Alliance to be a welcome distraction. Remember the "divorce case in the court of Count Vorpatril" scene?

Thanks!"
Try [author:Laumer Keith|546..."
I had forgotten about Keith Laumer's Retief! That is an excellent recommendation here. The humor has a sharper edge to it if you remember the Cold War. Sadly, given current events, some of it is not humorous anymore.

Yup, things stop being funny when they come too close to reality. Like the final minutes of the last episode of Black Adder, when Atkinson's character can't avoid leading the charge on German lines on Somme front any more...

Ben Elton did that all the time - kill off his characters at the end of a comedy series. Happens to The Young Ones as well as at least two Blackadders.
The very best comedy often features some pathos.

The tone of various novels (and novellas) varies pretty significantly. I started long ago with one of the darker ones, novella [..."
No, I haven't read most of these and have read hundreds of books since I read the Falling Free & books 1 & 2 in the series the first time, but have started them again and am quite enjoying them so far. I remember most about Falling Free, and least about that first Miles book. At that time I wasn't into all of the fighting, etc, in the first book about Miles so suddenly after Falling Free & Shards of Honour (which I liked better this time around.)
However, I am in a different phase of my life now and am hoping to enjoy the humour in The Warrior's Apprentice when I get to it after Barrayar.

This is great!

This is great!"
They are best on audio, IMO, but I liked the ones in print as well.
plus he adds thoughts for some of the beings we couldn't understand, etc, which is a lot of fun.

Thank you for the links, Phillip! I just added the first book to my TBR.

A scene that stands out in memory is (view spoiler)


Yes, that was great, too, but reading about Vorpatrils' attempts at divorce I laughed out loud.
Generally, the character of Miles' cousin "that idiot Ivan" is great - on the surface goofy and shallow, but more than capable of raising to the occasion when necessary.
Remember his "addition" to the garden decor at Miles' wedding? (It was in Winterfair Gifts, I believe, the novella following A Civil Campaign.)

If you're open to older works and not put off by a 1940s attitude toward alcohol, Henry Kuttner's stories of Gallegher, an inventor who can only invent while drunk and on sobering up doesn't know what he's invented, can be very funny. "The World Is Mine" in Two-Handed Engine: The Selected Stories of Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore was another that had me laughing out loud.
I haven't read a lot of John Sladek, but at one time he was the go-to for humorous satirical s.f.


Yes, that was great, too, but reading about Vorpatrils' at..."
The Miles & Ivan friendship/rivalry relationship is one of my favorites in SciFi. And yes, I remember his decor in Winterfair Gifts! It's hard to forget :)

Oh, I'm glad you mentioned Simak. One of the reason that I love most of his work is that even the darker or more serious pieces have a leavening of lightness. A snip of satire, a sprinkle of sarcasm, or even a snort of slapstick... whatever fits best.




I loved Douglas Adams back in the 80s but I sincerely doubt I'd crack a smile these days.


I loved Douglas Adams back in the 80s..."
I never got around to reading him until the past few years and found him hit or miss--from 5 stars to 2 in the Hitchhiker's Guide books. The first and 3rd were 5 stars on audio, but 4 and 5 in print respectively. 2nd and 4th 3 stars and the last barely got 2 stars. I may try this other book.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Yahtzee Croshaw (other topics)Jasper Fforde (other topics)
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Thanks!