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Humor Books

The humor shelf — top picks, hidden gems, and recent favorites, each with a full review.

Cover of What Are You Looking At?: The Surprising, Shocking, and Sometimes Strange Story of 150 Years of Modern Art by Will Gompertz

What Are You Looking At?: The Surprising, Shocking, and Sometimes Strange Story of 150 Years of Modern Art

by Will Gompertz

Modern art has a public-relations problem, and Gompertz knows exactly what it is. People suspect they're being had — that the urinal, the soup can, the unmade bed are an elaborate inside joke at the viewer's expense. His book is a sustained, good-humored answer to that suspicion. As a former director at the Tate, he has the credentials, but he writes like the friend who actually explains the punchline instead of smirking that you wouldn't get it. He runs the story chronologically from the Impressionists to the present, and the chronology is the secret weapon. Each movement becomes a reaction to the one before, a deliberate rule-break in a conversation that's been running for over a century. Cubism makes sense once you see what it was rebelling against; Duchamp's readymades land once you understand the question he was needling. Gompertz is a gifted storyteller, full of vivid anecdotes — the rivalries, the manifestos, the stunts — and he uses them to humanize artists who can seem like remote brand names. The jokes are frequent and genuinely funny, never at the expense of the argument. The accessibility comes at a cost, and Gompertz pays it knowingly. Specialists will find simplifications, and the breezy tone occasionally flattens artists into anecdotes about themselves. He's better on the famous turning points than on the quiet decades between them, and a reader who already knows this material may want more depth and fewer one-liners. The book is a doorway, not a destination, and it doesn't pretend otherwise. What it does superbly is restore the reader's confidence. By the end you don't just know the names; you have a working theory of why modern art looks the way it does and what its makers were arguing about. That's a real gift, because the intimidation factor is precisely what keeps people out of the galleries Gompertz loves. He treats the reader as smart but uninitiated, and he initiates without condescension. He's especially good at the connective tissue most surveys skip — the why between the what. Why a generation of painters suddenly cared about light rather than line; why photography forced art to stop competing for realism and go looking for something cameras couldn't do; how a single provocation could ripple forward for decades. Gompertz treats art history as a living argument rather than a sequence of masterpieces to be admired in silence, and that framing is genuinely clarifying. He wants you to see the reasoning, not just the result, and he trusts you to keep up once he's handed you the thread. I came away wanting to go back to museums I'd written off, which is the highest praise I can give a book like this. It turns a wall of bewilderment into a story with characters and stakes. You'll laugh more than you expect to, and you'll leave able to hold your own in front of a canvas that used to make you feel stupid — which, for most of us, is the whole point.
Cover of Does the Noise in My Head Bother You?: A Rock 'n' Roll Memoir by Steven Tyler

Does the Noise in My Head Bother You?: A Rock 'n' Roll Memoir

by Steven Tyler

Tyler does not write a memoir so much as perform one. The book careens forward in his actual speaking voice — riffing, free-associating, breaking into half-remembered lyrics and tall tales — and your enjoyment will depend almost entirely on how much you enjoy his company. For long stretches it's a blast: he's a natural raconteur, genuinely funny, with the comic timing of a man who has been working a crowd since the late sixties and never met a story he couldn't goose for effect. The Aerosmith saga is all here, told as a swaggering rise-fall-rise through the bars, the arenas, the Toxic Twins years with Joe Perry, the spectacular flameouts and reunions. Tyler is at his best on the music itself, on the craft of building a hook and the animal thrill of fronting a band that's firing. And underneath the bluster runs a darker, more honest current: decades of drugs and alcohol, multiple stints in rehab, the wreckage left in his wake. When he drops the act and talks plainly about addiction, the book briefly becomes something more affecting than a celebrity romp. It's also exhausting and unreliable, and Tyler would probably take both as compliments. The breathless style flattens chronology and skates past the people he hurt, particularly the women in his orbit, whom the book treats with a casual entitlement that has aged badly. A reader wanting a careful, reflective accounting of a life will be frustrated; this is mythmaking at full volume, with the self-awareness coming in flashes rather than sustained reckoning. The humor sometimes works overtime to keep real feeling at arm's length. What you get instead is the unfiltered texture of a particular kind of rock-and-roll life, narrated by a man who clearly relishes telling it. The jokes land more often than not, the energy never flags, and the sheer momentum carries you past the parts that don't bear close scrutiny. It's less a confession than a one-man show committed to the page. For all the chaos, the book is sharpest when Tyler talks shop. He's a serious craftsman beneath the clowning, and his descriptions of writing melodies, of the physical work of singing night after night, and of the particular chemistry between a singer and a guitarist carry an authority the party stories don't. Those passages remind you why he mattered in the first place — that under the scarves and the swagger is a musician who spent fifty years obsessed with the sound. When the showmanship steps aside and the craftsman talks, the memoir briefly becomes essential. Take it for what it is and it delivers: a loud, funny, occasionally moving night out with a frontman who has survived more than most and would rather make you laugh than make you pity him. Just don't go in expecting the noise in his head to ever fully quiet down — that's not the kind of book, or the kind of man, he's interested in being.
Cover of Tina Fey: Bossypants by Tina Fey

Tina Fey: Bossypants

by Tina Fey

Fey writes the way her best comedy works: tight, smart, and faster than you can fully brace for. Bossypants isn't a confessional memoir and never pretends to be — it's a collection of essays built for laughs, with the self-deprecation cranked high and the private life kept firmly offstage. What's underneath the jokes, though, is a surprisingly clear-eyed account of how a particular kind of funny, ambitious woman actually climbs, and the climbing is the most interesting thing here. The comedy itself is the main event, and it largely delivers. She's wonderful on the indignities of girlhood and early adulthood, on the improv apprenticeship at Second City, on the strange machine of Saturday Night Live and the now-legendary turn as Sarah Palin during a fevered election. Her best running argument is about women and authority: how she learned to lead a writers' room, why she stopped trying to win over people determined not to like her, what it costs to be the boss while also being expected to be likable. It's advice disguised as comedy, and the disguise is good. The book's looseness cuts both ways. Because it's assembled from set pieces, it can feel scattered, and a reader hoping for a deeper or more vulnerable memoir will notice how carefully Fey guards the door. The chapter built around photo-shoot satire and a few of the lighter bits feel like filler beside the SNL and 30 Rock material, and the relentless joke-per-line pace means real feeling rarely gets to sit still. Fey clearly prefers a punchline to a confession, and that's a deliberate, slightly frustrating choice. Still, the voice is the draw, and it's irresistible — wry, exacting, allergic to self-pity. When she writes about working motherhood, or about the absurd double standards applied to women in comedy, she's pointed without being preachy, landing the critique inside the laugh. You finish understanding not just her career but a whole comedy ecosystem and the particular obstacle course women run through it. There's a generosity to her comedy that's easy to miss under the speed. Fey is rarely cruel; even her sharpest material about colleagues, network notes, or her own appearance tends to turn the blade back on herself or on a system rather than on a person. That instinct gives the book a likability that survives its scattershot structure, and it models the very thing she's describing — how to be exacting and funny without becoming the kind of boss everyone dreads. Her chapter on producing, on the thankless arithmetic of running a show while a hundred people need answers, is the closest the book comes to a thesis, and it's quietly excellent. It's a quick read that's smarter than it lets on, the kind of book you finish in a sitting and quote for weeks. Bossypants won't tell you Tina Fey's secrets, but it will make you laugh out loud and, almost incidentally, hand you a real education in how competence and humor can carry a person to the top of a brutal business.

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