Can you recommend books with meme culture humor?

No, I am serious about this. I wish to get back into the learning of reading, but as a beginner I am repelled by the intense use of vocabulary, literary devices of classical literature books or intense and difficult-to-follow storyline of modern day fiction. I want to read a book that is clearly made with people like me in mind.

I’m not saying I want 10 second short paragraphs or extremely racist or bigoted comments to fuel my interest in reading the book. Though I rarely use social media, I do quite often look at memes, and they make me feel at home with how they are relatable and make use of clever wordings and phrases to express that one particular feeling. Same thing is seen in comments of meme forums where people come up with things to add to the humor of the original post or make it even better. I feel like this kind of expression could very well be possible to implement in a book in a textual medium while retaining the same amount of engagement and creativity.

I know my request may seem unnecessary, that I should quit bickering and just pick up a book and start reading it, and in reality I could by lending one from my family, however I wish to give this approach a chance as I am sure this situation must be faced by other people and someone could have a written a book to directly address these kind of people. I need a stepping stone to start my habit of reading books and I feel like starting from something I am already familiar with would greatly assist me.

I am not interested in any particular genre as of now apart from what I have expressed in the post so far. I could even go as far as to read an encyclopedia or an academic paper if the humor is engaging enough.

I feel that this topic of discussion is general, subjective and of help to others on the internet, which is why I decided to post it here instead of the dedicated books community.

LopensLeftArm,

When you said meme humor, a couple of Brandon Sanderson (he’s a fantasy author) examples came to mind.

(Very minor spoilers for some of his works follow, reader beware.)

There’s a scene in one of his books where a young woman is talking with her magical spirit companion about doing something “inappropriate” with her new fiancé, and the most inappropriate thing her spirit companion - who is a logic-based abstract entity - can concieve of them getting up to together is dividing by zero. This happens in the Stormlight Archive series, which is several very weighty tomes of high fantasy.

One of his books, which is aimed toward more of a YA audience, is narrated by one of his recurring characters and is just extremely witty, frequently breaking the fourth wall of the story when he himself happens to show up in it as a character off in the background. There’s one passage that I think is a great example of this, it happens when the main character is getting acquainted with all the members of a pirate ship she’s stumbled onto, and they’re talking about all the different crew:

I’m not going to ask you to remember them all. Mostly because I don’t remember them all. Therefore, for ease of both narrative and our collective sanity, I’m going to name only the more important members of the Crow’s Song. The rest, regardless of gender, I’ll call ‘Doug.’ You’d be surprised how common the name is across worlds. Oh, some spell it ‘Dug’ or ‘Duhg,’ but it’s always around. Regardless of local linguistics, parents eventually start naming their kids Doug. I once spent ten years on a planet where the only sapient life was a group of pancakelike beings that expressed themselves through flatulence. And I kid you not—one was named Doug. Though admittedly it had a very distinctive smell attached when the word was ‘spoken.’ ‘Doug’ is the naming equivalent to convergent evolution. And once it arrives, it stays. A linguistic Great Filter; a wakeup call. Once a society reaches peak Doug, it’s time for it to go sit in the corner and think about what it has done.

That one’s called Tress of the Emerald Sea. Fantastic read.

Maliwanonly,

Divine Dungeon series followed by the Ritualist series by Dakota Krout. You can read them individually, but the Ritualist is basically a direct sequel. Dakota does an amazing job of adding meme humor all over all of his books, but those two series are my favorite of his. Divine Dungeon is a ‘dungeon core’ genre and the Ritualist is a ‘Litrpg isekai’ genre if you want to look up what they are and see if it’s for you or not.

fubo, (edited )

This is a bit of a stretch, but Rule 34 by Charles Stross might be up your alley. It’s a detective story where the first murder victim is a spammer killed by a sex toy, and it gets weirder from there.

Yes, that’s the same Charles Stross who invented D&D’s githyanki, by the way.

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