Very Good
ReviewSublime comic genius. (Ben Elton )
You will have to read Wodehouse when you’re well, and when you’re poorly; when you’re travelling, and when you’re not; when you’re sentiment clever, and when you’re sentiment utterly dim. Wodehouse always lifts your spirits, no matter how high they take place to be already. (Lynne Truss )
You don’t make an analyzation of such sunlit perfection, you just bask in it is warmth and splendor. (Stephen Fry )
Wodehouse’s idyllic world may never stale. He will carry on to release future generations from captivity that may be more irksome than our own. He has made a world for us to live in and delight in. (Evelyn Waugh )
There are eleven tales in this book and each is the best. (The Observer )
The works of Wodehouse carry on on their distinguishable way, unmarked by the passage of time. (Kingsley Amis )
Wodehouse is the funniest writer—that is, the most resourceful and unflagging deliverer of fun—that the humane race, a glum crowd, has yet produced. (The New Yorker )
A brilliantly amusive writer—perhaps the most systematically funny the English language has yet produced. (The Times [London] )
About the AuthorP. G. Wodehouse was born in England in 1881 and in 1955 became an American citizen. He published more than ninety books and had a successful career writing lyrics and musicals in collaboration with Jerome Kern, Guy Bolton, and Cole Porter, amongst others.
Very Good
“To dive into a Wodehouse novel is to swim in numerous of the most elegantly turned phrases in the English language.”—Ben Schott
Follow the adventures of Bertie Wooster and his gentleman’s gentleman, Jeeves, in this stunning new edition of one of the greatest comic short story collections in the English language. Whoever or whatsoever the cause of Bertie Wooster’s consternation—Bobbie Wickham giving away his fierce Aunt Agatha’s dog; getting into the bad books of Sir Roderick Glossop; attempting to scupper the unfortunate infatuation of his friend Tuppy for a robust opera singer—Jeeves may always be relied on tyo untangle the most ferocious of muddles. Even Bertie’s.
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