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The Most Of P.G. Wodehouse

The Most Of P.G. Wodehouse

List Price: $16.00
Your Price: $10.88
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: This book really is a "best of" Wodehouse.....
Review: If you are at all wondering if you would like to try P.G. Wodehouse, this is definately the book for you.

This is a sampling of hilarious stories, from some of his main themes. Most notably, there is a selection of stories involving Freddie Wigeon and his doomed attempts at finding true love (all hilarious), a selection of stories involving Mr. Mulliner telling of the bizare adventures of his extended family, a selection of Stanley Ulkridge stories: The man who is determined to get rich the quick & easy way, and a stunning selection of Jeeves stories....

I became interested in reading Wodehouse after reading Douglas Adams's "The Salmon of Doubt." There is a brief essay where Adams praises Wodehouse, and describes Wodehouse's writing style. If you like Adams, you should like Wodehouse.

Wodehouse is very inventive with this short stories. There is always a lot of action, and emotional uproar. But his talent lies in his language and choice of words. If you think the following phrases are amusing--then read this book:

"He realized too late that George was in public relations, and the brains of people in public relations are like the soup in poor restaurants: It's never a good idea to stir them up."

"Luckily, I gave them a false name when I came in."
"Why did you do that?"
"Usual business precautions."

"If you took all of the women Freddie loved & lost, and laid them end to end, they'd stretch half way from here to picadilly."

"Longer, I'd say. Some of them were pretty tall."

Now--if you thought those jokes were "stupid," then don't buy this book. But if you're looking for some of the best short stories I have ever seen (and I've seen a whole big bunch), then go for this. The Jeeves stories in particular are very sharp.

Still----this is not the best book ever. There is a large section of "Golfing" stories that I did not like, but I really hate golf so don't take my word for it. There is also a longish story involving Blandings and some pig of his that I did not care for--but I don't think Blandings is funny either. The novel "Quicksilver" I found only average (a previous reviewer thought it was the best ever, so go figure).

At any rate--This book is worth owning, because you'll want to go back and visit these stories (maybe not the "golf" ones if you hate golf as much as I do) many times.....

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: This book really is a "best of" Wodehouse.....
Review: If you are at all wondering if you would like to try P.G. Wodehouse, this is definately the book for you.

This is a sampling of hilarious stories, from some of his main themes. Most notably, there is a selection of stories involving Freddie Wigeon and his doomed attempts at finding true love (all hilarious), a selection of stories involving Mr. Mulliner telling of the bizare adventures of his extended family, a selection of Stanley Ulkridge stories: The man who is determined to get rich the quick & easy way, and a stunning selection of Jeeves stories....

I became interested in reading Wodehouse after reading Douglas Adams's "The Salmon of Doubt." There is a brief essay where Adams praises Wodehouse, and describes Wodehouse's writing style. If you like Adams, you should like Wodehouse.

Wodehouse is very inventive with this short stories. There is always a lot of action, and emotional uproar. But his talent lies in his language and choice of words. If you think the following phrases are amusing--then read this book:

"He realized too late that George was in public relations, and the brains of people in public relations are like the soup in poor restaurants: It's never a good idea to stir them up."

"Luckily, I gave them a false name when I came in."
"Why did you do that?"
"Usual business precautions."

"If you took all of the women Freddie loved & lost, and laid them end to end, they'd stretch half way from here to picadilly."

"Longer, I'd say. Some of them were pretty tall."

Now--if you thought those jokes were "stupid," then don't buy this book. But if you're looking for some of the best short stories I have ever seen (and I've seen a whole big bunch), then go for this. The Jeeves stories in particular are very sharp.

Still----this is not the best book ever. There is a large section of "Golfing" stories that I did not like, but I really hate golf so don't take my word for it. There is also a longish story involving Blandings and some pig of his that I did not care for--but I don't think Blandings is funny either. The novel "Quicksilver" I found only average (a previous reviewer thought it was the best ever, so go figure).

At any rate--This book is worth owning, because you'll want to go back and visit these stories (maybe not the "golf" ones if you hate golf as much as I do) many times.....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Delightful!
Review: P.G. Wodehouse is one of my all-time favorite authors, and this is the best collection of his work I have read (although I'd also recommend "Life With Jeeves," with three of the "Jeeves" books). Every story in the book is immensely enjoyable, and it's physically impossible to read any of them without smiling. The complete novel, "Quick Service," is probably my favorite Wodehouse Work (pardon the alliteration), Jeeves and Bertie withstanding. Wodehouse's impossibly sunny style is impossible to resist, and in "Quick Service" he is at its most impossibly sunny. If your eyes are lacking in glint or your step is rather devoid of spring, then I highly recommend this book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Delightful!
Review: P.G. Wodehouse is one of my all-time favorite authors, and this is the best collection of his work I have read (although I'd also recommend "Life With Jeeves," with three of the "Jeeves" books). Every story in the book is immensely enjoyable, and it's physically impossible to read any of them without smiling. The complete novel, "Quick Service," is probably my favorite Wodehouse Work (pardon the alliteration), Jeeves and Bertie withstanding. Wodehouse's impossibly sunny style is impossible to resist, and in "Quick Service" he is at its most impossibly sunny. If your eyes are lacking in glint or your step is rather devoid of spring, then I highly recommend this book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Sense of Life
Review: Wodehouse is famous for gently poking fun at British aristocracy and the not so aristocratic as well. His Jeeves and Bertie Wooster characters have become classics. The stories project such a good sense of life that reading them is therapeutic.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good sampler from the Wodehouse canon
Review: Wodehouse's quintessentially British slapstick either tickles you or it doesn't. If you think it will but you aren't sure, this book is for you. (Personally I can't get enough of that "I say, old bean" stuff, despite its irremediable white-maleness.) But the homogeneity of the stories isn't going to win any converts.

Many of the stories are written according to the following formula: (A) boy meets girl; (B) formidable relative or rival stands between boy and girl; (C) boy overcomes all obstacles to successfully obtain girl unless boy happens to be Freddie Widgeon. The remainder of the stories will appear to follow basically the same formula, if you substitute "money" for "girl." The journey from points (A) to (C) inevitably involves hilarious parodies of proper upper-class British life - situations like gallopping over the English moors chased by angry farmers, engaging in polite negotiations with a gorilla, or being fixed under the steely eye of any number of powerful relations.

This anthology brings together about a half-dozen representative stories each from a number of areas (e.g. the Drones Club, Mr. Mulliner, Ukridge, and Jeeves stories), as well as a short novel called "Quick Service." If you are a hard-core Wodehouse fan, it might be advisable to skip this sampler and just buy the original books in order to avoid overlap.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good sampler from the Wodehouse canon
Review: Wodehouse's quintessentially British slapstick either tickles you or it doesn't. If you think it will but you aren't sure, this book is for you. (Personally I can't get enough of that "I say, old bean" stuff, despite its irremediable white-maleness.) But the homogeneity of the stories isn't going to win any converts.

Many of the stories are written according to the following formula: (A) boy meets girl; (B) formidable relative or rival stands between boy and girl; (C) boy overcomes all obstacles to successfully obtain girl unless boy happens to be Freddie Widgeon. The remainder of the stories will appear to follow basically the same formula, if you substitute "money" for "girl." The journey from points (A) to (C) inevitably involves hilarious parodies of proper upper-class British life - situations like gallopping over the English moors chased by angry farmers, engaging in polite negotiations with a gorilla, or being fixed under the steely eye of any number of powerful relations.

This anthology brings together about a half-dozen representative stories each from a number of areas (e.g. the Drones Club, Mr. Mulliner, Ukridge, and Jeeves stories), as well as a short novel called "Quick Service." If you are a hard-core Wodehouse fan, it might be advisable to skip this sampler and just buy the original books in order to avoid overlap.


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