The first one instantly made me think of Douglas Adams
Comment on irresistable
zqwzzle@lemmy.ca 20 hours ago
Is there an author that writes like this? I would like to read an entire book of this.
90s_hacker@reddthat.com 20 hours ago
NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de 20 hours ago
I can see the similarity but IMO this isn’t that close to Douglas Adams.
Sekoia@lemmy.blahaj.zone 15 hours ago
Well, in the first bit of the Hitchhiker’s guide, there’s:
“You’d better be prepared for the jump into hyperspace. It’s unpleasantly like being drunk.”
“What’s so unpleasant about being drunk?”
“You ask a glass of water.”
Which does fit, even if it’s not necessarily a “well-known phrase”
NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de 13 hours ago
I’ll take it, and I stand corrected.
LilB0kChoy@midwest.social 13 hours ago
Depending on what specifically appeals to you, you’d probably like Literary nonsense aithors or Absurdist fiction authors.
LNRDrone@sopuli.xyz 19 hours ago
Terry Pratchett Discworld books? From memory the ones about witches at least had a good bit of it.
tetris11@lemmy.ml 20 hours ago
check out Ann Leckie’s Ancillary Justice series. For a long while you’re not actually sure what species the characters are, what they look like, if they even have gender, and how many limbs they have.
It’s a series that focuses solely on plot and has a very loose definition of identity (and it’s awesome)
Enkrod@feddit.org 19 hours ago
A few pages later
Terry Pratchett - The Wee Free Men
Terry Pratchett - Guards Guards
MagicShel@lemmy.zip 18 hours ago
I love Douglas Adams and HHGttG probably did more to inform my politics than any other single source, and it feels completely relevant today. If anything, Adams wasn’t cynical enough when writing Zaphod.
LilB0kChoy@midwest.social 13 hours ago
Christopher Moore as well! Let me go find some snippets.