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Andy Borowitz's Top Book Recommendations

Want to know what books Andy Borowitz recommends on their reading list? We've researched interviews, social media posts, podcasts, and articles to build a comprehensive list of Andy Borowitz's favorite book recommendations of all time.

1

True Grit

True Grit is his most famous novel--first published in 1968, and the basis for the movie of the same name starring John Wayne. It tells the story of Mattie Ross, who is just fourteen years of age when a coward going by the name of Tom Chaney shoots her father down in Fort Smith, Arkansas, and robs him of his life, his horse, and $150 in cash money. Mattie leaves home to avenge her father's blood. With the one-eyed Rooster Cogburn, the meanest available U.S. Marshal, by her side, Mattie pursues the homicide into Indian Territory.


True Grit is eccentric, cool,...
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Recommended by Andy Borowitz, and 1 others.

Andy BorowitzI urge everyone who wants a good laugh to read it. Plus it’s very short – a good quality in a comic novel. (Source)

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2

The Magic Christian

One of the funniest, cruelest, and most savagely revealing books about American life ever written, The Magic Christian has been called Terry Southern's masterpiece. Guy Grand is an eccentric billionaire — the last of the big spenders — determined to create disorder in the material world and willing to spare no expense to do it. Leading a life full of practical jokes and madcap schemes, his ultimate goal is to prove his theory that there is nothing so degrading or so distasteful that someone won't do it for money. In Guy Grand's world, everyone has a price, and he is all too willing to pay it.... more
Recommended by Andy Borowitz, and 1 others.

Andy BorowitzIt’s almost Candide-like in the simplicity of its conception. (Source)

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3

Lucky Jim

Kingsley Amis's witty campus novel, Lucky Jim is a comedy that skewers the hypocrisies and vanities of 1950s academic life. This Penguin Modern Classics edition contains an introduction by David Lodge.

Jim Dixon has accidentally fallen into a job at one of Britain's new red brick universities. A moderately successful future in the History Department beckons - as long as Jim can stave off the unwelcome advances of fellow lecturer Margaret, survive a madrigal-singing weekend at Professor Welch's, deliver a lecture on 'Merrie England' and resist Christine, the hopelessly...
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Recommended by Andy Borowitz, and 1 others.

Andy BorowitzThis is Kingsley Amis’s best novel, and maybe the best novel ever written about university life. (Source)

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4

Scoop

In "Scoop, " surreptitiously dubbed "a newspaper adventure, " Waugh flays Fleet Street and the social pastimes of its war correspondants as he tells how William Boot became the star of British super-journalism an how, leaving part of his shirt in the claws of the lovely Katchen, he returned from Ishmaelia to London as the "Daily's Beast's" more accoladed overseas reporter. less

William BoydEverybody remembers Fleet Street and journalism and Lord Copper and The Daily Beast but the novel is about a classic, almost Shakespearean, case of mistaken identity. (Source)

Robert CottrellJournalists would pride themselves on their amateurism, and Scoop shoves that back at them in spades. (Source)

William BoydEverybody remembers Fleet Street and journalism and Lord Copper and The Daily Beast but the novel is about a classic, almost Shakespearean, case of mistaken identity. (Source)

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