"Machiavelli's The Little Prince"
First Runner-Up:
"Green Eggs and Hamlet"
"Fahrenheit 451 of the Vanities"
Second Runner-Up:
Antoine de Saint-Exupery's classic children's tale as presented by Machiavelli. The whimsy of human nature is embodied in many delightful and intriguing characters, all of whom are executed.
Would you kill him in his bed?
Thrust a dagger through his head?
I would not, could not, kill the King.
I could not do that evil thing.
I would not wed this girl, you see.
Now, get her to a nunnery.
An '80s yuppie is denied books. He does not object, or even notice.
"Where's Walden?"
"Catch-22 in the Rye"
"2001: A Space Iliad"
"Rikki-Kon-Tiki-Tavi"
"The Maltese Faulkner"
"Jane Eyre Jordan"
"Looking for Mr. Godot"
"The Scarlet Pimpernel Letter"
"Lorna Dune"
"The Remains of the Day of the Jackal"
"The Invisible Man of La Mancha"
"Singing in the Black Rain"
"Fiddlemarch"
"Of Three Blind Mice and Men"
"Planet of the Grapes of Wrath"
"Paradise Lost in Space"
"The Exorstentialist"
Alas, the challenge of locating Henry David Thoreau in each
richly-detailed drawing loses its appeal when it quickly becomes clear that he is always in the woods.
Holden learns that if you're insane, you'll probably flunk out of prep school, but if you're flunking out of prep school, you're probably not insane.
The Hal 9000 computer wages an insane 10-year war against the Greeks after falling victim to the Y2K bug.
Thor Heyerdahl recounts his attempt to prove Rudyard Kipling's theory that the mongoose first came to India on a raft from Polynesia.
Is the black bird a tortured symbol of Sam's struggles with race and family? Does it signify his decay of soul along with the soul of the Old South? Is it merely a crow, mocking his attempts to understand? Or is it worth a cool mil?
Plucky English orphan girl survives hardships to lead the Chicago Bulls to the NBA championship.
A young woman waits for Mr. Right to enter her life. She has a loooooong wait.
An 18th-century English nobleman leads a double life, freeing comely young adulteresses from the prisons of post-Revolution France.
An English farmer, Paul Atreides, falls for the daughter of a notorious rival clan, the Harkonnens, and pursues a career as a giant worm jockey in order to impress her.
A formal English butler puts his loyalty to his employer above all else, until he is persuaded to join a plot to assassinate Charles deGaulle.
Don Quixote discovers a mysterious elixir which renders him invisible. He proceeds to go on a mad rampage of corruption and terror, attacking innocent people in the streets and all the while singing "To fight the Invisible Man" until he is finally stopped by a windmill.
A gang of vicious Japanese druglords beat the shit out of Gene Kelly.
Emotionally dessicated medievalist Dr. Casaubon is transformed, when everyone in the town reveals that they are Jewish and start to dance and sing a lot.
Burgess Meredith has his limbs hacked off by a psychopathic farmer's wife. Did you ever see such a sight in your life?
Astronaut lands on mysterious planet, only to discover that it is his very own home planet of Earth, which has been taken over by the Joads, a race of dirt-poor corn farmers who miraculously developed rudimentary technology and evolved the ability to speak after exposure to nuclear radiation.
Satan, Moloch, and Belial are sentenced to spend eternity in a flying saucer with a goofy robot, an evil scientist, and two annoying children.
Camus psychological thriller about a priest who casts out a demon by convincing it that there's really no purpose to what it's doing.