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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's both funny and moving and gives a wonderful insight into the issue of race relations in the Deep South.
Try reading Bill Bryson. I did not read him for years because I thought he was just a travel writer.
But what he actually does is go and visit places and write VERY FUNNY books about what happened there.
He is american but has lived in the UK for years and has a very English style of writing (lots of irony and sarcasm).
He has written one non-travel book called "A Short History of Nearly Everything" where he tries to write the complete history of the earth, our solar system and the universe in one book.
It sounds heavy but is not, partly because he admits he had to learn it all before writing the book, and also because of his light writing style.
This is a book you will enjoy reading AND you will learn something.
Here is his web site
http://www.randomhouse.com/features/billbryson/flat/home.php
Can I say one more thing about Bill Bryson.
I think he has an ambition to make you laugh at least 3 times on each page. Sometimes you laugh at every sentence.
If you do not believe me go to WH Smiths and look for the Bill Bryson books (probably travel section) pick up any one at random and open any page and start reading.
I gaurantee you will laugh within the first few sentences.
He had made me laugh out loud many times.
If you aren't ready for classics and non-fiction, I suggest looking for historical novels. Not historical romance with damsels in ballgowns fleeing moonlit castles on the cover, but books like James Michener wrote. Pompeii, suggested earlier, sounds like it's in the same vein. Michener writes Sprawling Epics that cover a broad period of history in one part of the world. You get wrapped up in the characters and their dramas, hardly noticing how much history and culture you're learning. Michener wrote The Source about the middle east, Chesapeake about a part of the US east coast, Hawaii, and many more. They are all loooong books -- It's amazing how many pages he produced in his lifetime! Leon Uris wrote some of these historical epics too: Trinity about Ireland and Exodus about the middle east. They are all good gripping reads, especially if you are a fast enough reader that you don't forget the characters from one sitting to the next...There are a lot of people to keep track of in these books.
There have been some excellent suggestions on the list. I'd add a couple of historical writers: Patrick O'Brian's Jack Aubrey novels and George McDonald Fraser's Flashman books. Both series are extensively researched and I learned lots about 19th century histoty from them (particularly Fraser's). They're also cracking good reads.
Bill Bryson is my second favourite - really funny (for an American!!)