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Man Walks into a Bar: Over 5,000 of the Most Hilarious Jokes, Funniest Insults and Gut-Busting One-Liners
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Barnes and Noble
Man Walks into a Bar: Over 5,000 of the Most Hilarious Jokes, Funniest Insults and Gut-Busting One-Liners
Current price: $18.95
Barnes and Noble
Man Walks into a Bar: Over 5,000 of the Most Hilarious Jokes, Funniest Insults and Gut-Busting One-Liners
Current price: $18.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Paperback
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
Be the life of the party with this ridiculous and definitely-not-for-kids joke book. Includes knock-knock-jokes, one-liners, puns, and more hilarious jokes.
Do you want to be the person who keeps friends, family, and coworkers laughing with a new joke every day? Packed full of
t
housands of jokes
and alphabetically organized into hundreds of topics from accountants to zebras, this book offers you a massive collection of over-the-top jokes that will have everyone
laughing out loud
.
Did you hear about the flasher who was thinking of retiring?
He finally decided to stick it out for one more year!
A dog with three legs walks into a Wild West bar and says, “I’m looking for the man who shot my paw.”
The police have reported the theft of a shipment of filing cabinets, document folders and labeling machines—it’s believed to have been the work of organized crime
Do you want to be the person who keeps friends, family, and coworkers laughing with a new joke every day? Packed full of
t
housands of jokes
and alphabetically organized into hundreds of topics from accountants to zebras, this book offers you a massive collection of over-the-top jokes that will have everyone
laughing out loud
.
Did you hear about the flasher who was thinking of retiring?
He finally decided to stick it out for one more year!
A dog with three legs walks into a Wild West bar and says, “I’m looking for the man who shot my paw.”
The police have reported the theft of a shipment of filing cabinets, document folders and labeling machines—it’s believed to have been the work of organized crime