The Folio Book of Comic Short Stories by Robertson Davies, Oscar Wilde, Charles Dickens, Kingsley Amis, Stella Gibbons, Ben Travers, Dorothy Parker, Elizabeth Bowen, Damon Runyon, O Henry, P.G. Wodehouse

The Folio Book of Comic Short Stories

by Robertson Davies, Oscar Wilde, Charles Dickens, Kingsley Amis, Stella Gibbons, Ben Travers, Dorothy Parker, Elizabeth Bowen, Damon Runyon, O Henry, and P.G. Wodehouse

'Laughter,' as James Thurber recently remarked, 'need not be cut out of anything, since it improves everything.' It is a claim marvelously borne out in The Folio Book of Comic Short Stories. Thurber himself contributes a cautionary tale of matrimony, romance blossoms in Damon Runyon's 'Piece of Pie' as Miss Violette Shumberger eats valiantly for America, Evelyn Waugh sends up the movies in 'Excursion in Reality', Stella Gibbons mocks the world of journalism in 'The Great Mammoth Story', and human vanity and hypocrisy are mercilessly skewered in Saki's 'The Byzantine Omelette', From simple slapstick to cool sophistication, these stories share a genius for setting off life's fireworks. Also featuring the work of Oscar Wilde, O. Henry, V.S. Pritchett and Kingsley Amis.

Reviewed by MurderByDeath on

4.5 of 5 stars

Share

An anthology of 22 short comedic pieces, I picked this up on impulse at a UBS, because I'd never read any of the authors before (correction: I've read Wodehouse) and there were more than a couple names here that I'd often felt like I should have read, but hadn't; I was afraid they'd be weighty and, you know, deep.  So here was my chance to read their work without a lot of emotional commitment.

Almost all of the stories here were excellent.  As in any collection, there were a few clunkers: I found the ending of V.S. Pritchett's piece abrupt and nonsensical.  Elizabeth Bowen's and Muriel Spark's pieces left me flat. 

The really great stories out-weighed those though: Wilde's The Model Millionaire was my favorite of the book, with Saki's Byzantine Omelette and Robertson Davies' The Xerox in the Lost Room close behind.  Oh, and A Piece of Pie by Damon Runyon had me laughing at the truly cunning ending.  Stories by Dorothy Parker and James Thurber had more of an emotional edge; the humor from these stories came from a darker, cynical view.

All in all a truly excellent collection; I've already bought a collection of Saki's work based on what I've read here, and I'm looking forward to reading more by some of these authors.

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 13 May, 2016: Finished reading
  • 13 May, 2016: Reviewed