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The value of jokes in Jewish-Christian dialogue
Have you heard the one about the priest, the minister, and the rabbi?
This novel about ridiculously rich people offers no simple lessons
Patrick deWitt is far too smart a writer to offer a sentimental narrative of redemption.
Harrison Scott Key’s dreams
Is the desire for greatness a temptation or a vocation?
Civility is fraught. Jokes are better.
A well-placed wisecrack can pull the mighty down from their thrones.
There once was a Wednesday named Ash
It's Lent, and we all know what that means: time for limericks.
When Easter Sunday falls on April Fools' Day
A good joke can reveal the distance between what is and what should be.
by Miles Townes
The sparkle of James McBride's stories
Five-Carat Soul is filled with hilarious storytelling, unusual characters, and stark realities.
by Debra Bendis
The earnest, hilarious Al Franken
The senator's jokes are still funny, even if Trump has made his satire obsolete.
Esther's story would be infuriating if it wasn't so over-the-top ridiculous.
by Debbie Blue
So, Sen. Paul filibustered and received brief assurances that at least there are some limits to the Obama adminstration's policy of targeted assassination. Alex Kane—in a Short Imagined Monologue, one of my favorite features at McSweeney's humor site—spells out some others. I for one would be reassured if the White House actually said this.
These parables are like God's joke in the form of an invasive species.
This "Which denomination are you?" flowchart from Lutheran Satire has been making the rounds this week.
Much of the most delightfully silly online humor follows a particular formula: a single good idea that alters or plays on a pop-cultural artifact; execution that relies on computer technology, but not too much (some simple Photoshop work, a couple lines of code); loads of nostalgia.
A critic once called Clyde Edgerton the "love child of Dave Barry and Flannery O'Connor"—a reflection of the fact that his novels are both dark and funny.