Search results for 'Roy Blount'
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Even More Pretty Good Jokes
Garrison Keillor; performed by Garrison Keillor, Roy Blount Jr., and an ensemble cast
Includes jokes from A Prairie Home Companion Joke Shows airing between 2004 and 2008, and additional skits. Learn More
English Majors
Garrison Keillor; performed by Garrison Keillor, Tom Keith, Fred Newman, Tim Russell, Sue Scott, and an ensemble cast
Audie® Award Winner
ENGLISH MAJORS. You know who you are and here is a double-CD celebrating the secret society of those who, though they may be chauffeuring kids to swim lessons or writing Unix programs or frying cheeseburgers, still could, if need be, write a term paper on the water imagery in The Waste Land. Learn More
Pretty Good Jokes
Garrison Keillor; performed by Garrison Keillor, Roy Blount Jr., Paula Poundstone, and an ensemble cast
Fulfilling the flood of requests from enthused listeners, Pretty Good Jokes combines all the jokes from A Prairie Home Companion's first four joke shows (1996-1999). Learn More
Plenty of Pretty Good Jokes
Garrison Keillor; performed by Garrison Keillor, Roy Blount Jr., Calvin Trillin, Paula Poundstone and an ensemble cast
Includes all the jokes from the first eight Joke Shows. Learn More
A Murder, a Mystery, and a Marriage
Mark Twain; foreword and afterword by Roy Blount Jr.; read by Garrison Keillor and Roy Blount Jr.
Set in the fictional town of Deer Lick, Missouri, A Murder, a Mystery, and a Marriage chronicles the fortunes of a farmer determined to have his daughter marry the son of a wealthy man. Learn More
Save Room for Pie
Roy Blount Jr.; read by the author
Roy Blount, Jr., is one of America’s most cherished comic writers. He’s been compared to Mark Twain and James Thurber, and his books have been called "a work of art" (The New York Times Book Review). Now, in Save Room for Pie, he applies his much-praised wit and charm to a rich and fundamental topic: food. Learn More
Long Time Leaving
Roy Blount Jr.; read by Roy Blount Jr.
It's North against South, and Georgia-born humorist and social commentator Roy Blount, Jr., now a resident of the Northeast, is debating exactly which side should win the titles Most Eccentric and Most Misunderstood. Learn More
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