Humor
Review:It's an interesting memoir...autobiography (I need to google the difference) about what can happen when you love comedy, work at honing your comedic skills, and put yourself out there. But even if you semi-like Mindy Kaling (sorry Min, I swear this statement ends well) you will LOVE this book. Just buy it dude. It's really good! Read more
Review:One of a series of delightful adventures in which the young hero finds a creative way to best a less-than-mellow adult tormentor. Great illustrations enhance another brilliant children's book that is very adult in theme and execution. Read more
Review:This book was interesting and healed my attention quite well. it is not the most interesting book ever, but it was very funny. The great mouse plot was very funny and he was quite a trouble maker. I would recommend this book to anyone who would like a funny, easy read. Read more
Review:A TYPICAL ROSS MATHEWS POINT OF VIEW..VERY FUNNY, RAW IN SOME WAYS, BUT STILL VERY FUNNY........I LAUGHED OUT LOUD ABOUT SOME OF HIS MEANDERINGS, AND THAT IS SOMETHING I RARELY DO WHEN READING A BOOK.......I WISH HIM THE BEST OF LUCK ON HIS NEW TALK SHOW.....JUST HOPE HE KEEPS IT "WATCHABLE" AND NOT TOO RISQUE.........JAN Read more
Review:Not appropriate for kids! I am very disgusted with this book. I bought this for my young nephew who also has the books 'I could pee on this' and 'sorry I barfed on your bed'. I thought this would be another similar, but Mittens is more adult humor. I flipped through a few pages and found on page two the very offensive expression "Bros before Hoes" is used, as well as a few other references I did not think appropriate for a kid. I wish the book was more accurately labeled as adult content, then I... Read more
No reviews yet
Review:This book is typical Joan Rivers - rude, raunchy and absolutely hysterical! If you do not like her brand of humor you may find this book offensive. Joan says exactly what's on her mind and does not spare any groups of people with her insults but if you like Joan Rivers, you will not stop laughing. Read more
Review:Camus introduces to the reader, in a rare second-person point of view, to Jean-Baptiste Clamence. Camus' novel is almost interactive, with Clamence answering the reader's questions and taking the reader's hand. At points in the novel, the reader is actually telling Clamence what to do, and he is responding back. It is slightly eerie, but ingenious. The novel, however, is about Clamence's experiences in WWII, and how he has survived to become a deranged, off-kilter person. The last chapter i... Read more
Review:Ryan Morgan loves his fair share of women no matter what shape or size. When his soon to be brother in law drops out of their plans Ryan is left at a bar but not for long. His life is about to change in a drastic way when the women of his dreams walks through the door.
Tessa Rodriguez has given up on men and their a** hole-ish ways. Abstaining from physical contact from any man for over 9 months has her best friend dressing her up and taking her out to a bar but Tessa is in for a real tre... Read more
Review:'Fascists are inferior people who believe it when somebody tells them they're superior.'
We read the memoirs of the last president of the USA, now 100 years old and living on the Island of Death, Manhattan. A plague has decimated the island population. He isn't senile, but he has these hiccups.
The essence of this light novelette is not politics or the apocalypse, it is the relationship of the hero with his twin sister. Together they are genius, separated they are just average. Apart f... Read more









