Books tagged: joke

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Found: 18 results

Unlucky Alice: The Lottery Ticket    by Tanya G
Price: $0.99 USD. 6850 words. Published on January 1, 2010. .

Alice has won the lottery, All she has to do is reach the claim office to collect her winnings. However, being the most unlucky person in history means this task will be anything but easy. Join her on her journey, and laugh, as she goes through over 80 unlucky events.
True Earth: The Short History of Our Planet Part 1    by Bruce Hendler
Price: $5.99 USD. 133080 words. Published on January 19, 2010. .

A Tour Guide with a Bad Attitude made somewhat bearable by a sense of humor - the Author leads you on a journey through our Home in The Universe. Somehow he wanders off into all kinds of diversions: UFOs and Fairies; Dragons, Monsters and Vampires; various plots and conspiracies; some history you never knew. Earth Science made Fun for anyone curious about the real story of our planet.
Learn Spanish with Jokes    by Jeremy Taylor
Price: $2.99 USD. 3860 words. Published on November 2, 2010. .

Learn Spanish with Jokes is a collection of 100 Spanish jokes in very easy Spanish. There is also some vocabulary help to help the reader. 100 jokes for only $2.99! That's 3 cents a joke! It's not only educational - it's a lot of fun as well! Some of the jokes are a little risqué but anyone over the age of 16 shouldn't blush while reading it.
The Freel of Streel: Part One in the Narrative of John of Origin    by Ian Kraft
Price: $2.50 USD. 65650 words. Published on November 19, 2010. .

It is always advisable, when you are a conman, to make sure that the town that you're about to try to con does not have a land such as Streel hidden within it. For if it does, you may find yourself trying to escape your mind in an incomprehensible land with a left-handed scribe, being forced to deal with lexically picky ants, Kweengs, and the Freel on your journey through your fears, God and love.
The Baby Boomer Book    by Janine Jason
Price: $1.99 USD. 1650 words. Published on December 1, 2010. .

Cartoons about the bitter-sweet facts of life for an aging generation
Claustrum: Part Two in the Narrative of John of Origin    by Ian Kraft
Price: $2.50 USD. 61290 words. Published on January 16, 2011. .

Claustrum, a superhero with a strange power, the ability to control people with strange, elegiac mixtures of words, seemingly randomly shows up in the city of Dioma, not knowing where he came from or why he is there. The city is then beleaguered by the cruel villain Sine Animus, who is immune to Claustrum's powers over words. Claustrum flees the city and is forced to seek his own personal truth.
The Polyglot's Nightmares: Part X½ in the Narrative of John of Origin    by Ian Kraft
Price: $2.50 USD. 60080 words. Published on January 16, 2011. .

Fleeing a war and in search of himself, Ion finds himself residing in a number of strange caves, on the walls of which are written a strange language. He meets a woman who guides him through his state of being a refugee and is troubled by strange dreams that seem to incorporate the existence of the war, his love for the woman he has met and a sense of the divine.
Cuoi thoai mai - A Vietnamese joke book by Tran Nam    by Nam Tran
Price: $1.99 USD. 5670 words. Published on February 2, 2011. .

Sau những giờ làm việc căng thẳng, bạn cần giải trí bằng những câu truyện cười, để thấy đời thêm tươi.
Life's A Joke    by Jay M Horne
Price: $5.99 USD. 39050 words. Published on March 5, 2011. .

Addictive! A book that reveals the true potential of Life and the importance of laughter. As Jay M Horne records a dialogue of a very special kind, questions about Infinite, God, existence, and the human spirits unwavering strength to persevere and heal itself, are answered as he fights and wins his epic battle.
Shambles    by E. G. Fabricant
Price: Free! 760 words. Published on April 9, 2011. .

Here's my entry in Round Six of National Public Radio's "Three Minute Fiction," concluded April 3. As usual, had to be 600 words or less; this round one character had to tell a joke and one character had to cry. From the selections, seems the screeners are most fond of self-conscious, first-person exposition--tell, don't show. Cheats the reader, I think; let 'em make up their own minds.