Friday 29 September 2017

A Definitive List Of The Best Dark Comedy Novel

By Robert Peterson


Black comedy is a concept created by entertainers during the Surrealist movement back in the mid thirties. This is often regarded as a classic comical style that focuses on various grim topics. However, instead of focusing on its dark aspects, the one who delivers the jokes makes light of it or focuses on its humor. Majority of the topics used here are considered taboo by society, which makes it a somewhat unconventional type of humor to have.

At present times, this comical approach continues to be used by various comedians and has been interpreted in numerous formats. This includes the creation of literature that expands on various topics regarding it, as well as movies and songs created by artists across the world. Following this trail of thought, this article contains a list of top seven titles in the Dark Comedy Novel category in literature.

A famous and modern author known for this literary format is Chuck Palahniuk. He is known for using dark humor as a means of entertainment and a plot device, as evident in Haunted. The plot involves short stories focused on all the characters involved. These stories are compiled and intertwine during the course of events, to create a unifying retelling of the horrors faced by these strangers while being trapped under one roof together.

Daniel Handler wrote The Basic Eight, which focuses on a diary written by Flannery. Flannery is a student still in high school, who often has discussions and muses about various topics like Satanism, the irony of talk shows, and the flaws of the educational system set in America. Near the end, she participates in a school production of Othello, where she begins to draw comparisons between herself and its characters.

The Death of Bunny Munro was created by Nick Cave, who first rose to fame as a vocalist in an alternative rock band. The titular character is Bunny, a man who is an alcoholic and frequently involves himself with various strange women, following the suicide of his wife. As a means to support himself and his son, he takes up a job that requires him to sell beautification products as a door salesman. As he does this, he is unaware of a serial killer who is trailing him close behind.

Another Chuck Palahniuk novel that makes this list is titled Choke, which was also adapted into a movie. The story revolves around a man named Victor, who is addicted to sexual intercourse and is stressed over finding a suitable job to pay for the expenses in keeping his mother in a good nursing home. After receiving various donations, he manages to obtain a position working at a colonial museum before being able to build the home he always wanted.

One hundred and One Uses for a Dead Cat was first published in the late forties and was a collection of comics that continued into two thousand eleven. It was written by Simon Bond and each panel ended with his tag line, which revolves around a cat. The cats are drawn in a macabre fashion, some of them are dead while others are doing activities that humans would normally do.

Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Is a famous classical writer that created novels in this category. A notable one is The Sirens of Titan, which was published during the 50s and is considered by scholars and enthusiasts as an innovative work of fiction. It also has underlying tones of science fiction where the protagonists ponder and discuss topics about free will, a god, and the purpose of human life. As they do this, the world is slowly being taken over by Martians, who intend to invade the planet.

The Rules of Attraction was written by Bret Eaton Ellis, who is also known for his satirical works. This novel focused on three bohemian art college students, who become intertwined with one another. This results in a love triangle, which was converted into a major film during the early two thousands.




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