I'm sure I'm not the only one who was ever drawn to a book because they knew the author through something "unliterary". For example, Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie, who became relatively famous through comedy shows (Jeeves and Wooster, A Bit of Fry and Laurie, etc. and their roles in BlackAdder, The Young Ones, etc.), both went on to write novels.
Hugh Laurie
Stephen Fry
(Fiction)
I've read The Gun Seller and The Stars' Tennis Balls myself and enjoyed them for what they were (or what I think they were). I've been meaning to pick up another Fry book (The Hippopotamus, maybe?), but haven't gotten around to it yet. (Or maybe I just need someone to recommend one to me?)
Hugh Laurie
- The Gun Seller (1996);
- The Paper Soldier (due in 2006/7?).
Stephen Fry
(Fiction)
- The Liar (1991);
- The Hippopotamus (1994);
- Making History (1996);
- The Stars' Tennis Balls (2000).
- Paperweight (1992);
- Moab Is My Washpot (1997);
- Rescuing the Spectacled Bear (2002);
- Stephen Fry's Incomplete and Utter History of Classical Music (2004).
I've read The Gun Seller and The Stars' Tennis Balls myself and enjoyed them for what they were (or what I think they were). I've been meaning to pick up another Fry book (The Hippopotamus, maybe?), but haven't gotten around to it yet. (Or maybe I just need someone to recommend one to me?)