The Ultimate Jewish Joke Book


Book Description




The Official W.A.S.P. Joke Book


Book Description

Close the country club and mix the martinis. Larry Wilde has climbed to the top of the ladder of laughs. From preppies to preplings, Harvard to the Hamptons, readers will pop their button-downs over his wackiest collection of racy wit yet.







The Ultimate Lawyers Joke Book


Book Description

Larry Wilde's newest collection of legal laughs is so hysterical it's almost criminal! Author of a plethora of popular Joke Books, he has become America's #1 bestselling humorist.




Secretly Inside


Book Description

In the Dutch countryside the war seems far away. For most people, at least. But not for Ed, a Jew in Nazi-occupied Holland trying to find some safe sanctuary. Compelled to go into hiding in the rural province of Zeeland, he is taken in by a seemingly benevolent family of farmers. But, as Ed comes to realize, the Van 't Westeindes are not what they seem. Camiel, the son of the house, is still in mourning for his best friend, a German soldier who committed suicide the year before. And Camiel's fiery, unstable sister Mariete begins to nurse a growing unrequited passion for their young guest, just as Ed realizes his own attraction to Camiel. As time goes by, Ed is drawn into the domestic intrigues around him, and the farmhouse that had begun as his refuge slowly becomes his prison.




The Official Doctors Jokebook


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Lowering the Bar


Book Description

What do you call 600 lawyers at the bottom of the sea? Marc Galanter calls it an opportunity to investigate the meanings of a rich and time-honored genre of American humor: lawyer jokes. Lowering the Bar analyzes hundreds of jokes from Mark Twain classics to contemporary anecdotes about Dan Quayle, Johnnie Cochran, and Kenneth Starr. Drawing on representations of law and lawyers in the mass media, political discourse, and public opinion surveys, Galanter finds that the increasing reliance on law has coexisted uneasily with anxiety about the “legalization” of society. Informative and always entertaining, his book explores the tensions between Americans’ deep-seated belief in the law and their ambivalence about lawyers.