Allison Symes's Blog - Posts Tagged "wodehouse"
Playing with Language
One of the joys of reading across a wide range of genres, including non-fiction, is discovering the different ways authors play with language.
For me the late Denis Norden and Frank Muir were great exponents of this and one of my favourite paperbacks is their My Word The Ultimate Collection. This is full of puns and tall tales galore! Bliss and an addictive read.
I like crisp, punchy styles of writing but every so often you come across a line or two that are just so engrossing, they almost take your breath away. P.G. Wodehouse was a master at creating worlds within what would be considered now very long sentences, but you simply have to read to the end.
I suppose the real test of a good story is does it provoke your curiosity enough so you read it through regardless of the style or genre in which it was written?
For me the late Denis Norden and Frank Muir were great exponents of this and one of my favourite paperbacks is their My Word The Ultimate Collection. This is full of puns and tall tales galore! Bliss and an addictive read.
I like crisp, punchy styles of writing but every so often you come across a line or two that are just so engrossing, they almost take your breath away. P.G. Wodehouse was a master at creating worlds within what would be considered now very long sentences, but you simply have to read to the end.
I suppose the real test of a good story is does it provoke your curiosity enough so you read it through regardless of the style or genre in which it was written?
Published on September 27, 2018 13:18
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Tags:
good-stories, humour, muir, norden, playing-with-language, wodehouse
Good Books
What defines a good book for you?
For me a good book is one that fulfils its purpose, whether that is to make me laugh, show me a world I did not know previously, or help me improve my history knowledge etc.
It has to keep me gripped to The End. I have to be eagerly looking forward to reading the next chapter when I read in bed. (And be mightily miffed if the Sandman comes along a bit early and I don't get to read for as long as I'd like).
A good book will have writing that takes my breath away with the joy of how it is put together. P.G. Wodehouse is the master there as far as I'm concerned.
Humorous books have to not only make me laugh out loud, but to keep me smiling until The End. I love books which are obviously funny but which raise smiles by their subtle use of language, puns etc. Again Wodehouse is brilliant here and so was Terry Pratchett.
Crime fiction has to bring out the "I've got to find out what happens next" feeling. And it must deliver on its promise. Historical fiction has to make me feel "yes, it could have been that way" and so on.
Good books I always re-read. Maybe that is the true test of a great read.
For me a good book is one that fulfils its purpose, whether that is to make me laugh, show me a world I did not know previously, or help me improve my history knowledge etc.
It has to keep me gripped to The End. I have to be eagerly looking forward to reading the next chapter when I read in bed. (And be mightily miffed if the Sandman comes along a bit early and I don't get to read for as long as I'd like).
A good book will have writing that takes my breath away with the joy of how it is put together. P.G. Wodehouse is the master there as far as I'm concerned.
Humorous books have to not only make me laugh out loud, but to keep me smiling until The End. I love books which are obviously funny but which raise smiles by their subtle use of language, puns etc. Again Wodehouse is brilliant here and so was Terry Pratchett.
Crime fiction has to bring out the "I've got to find out what happens next" feeling. And it must deliver on its promise. Historical fiction has to make me feel "yes, it could have been that way" and so on.
Good books I always re-read. Maybe that is the true test of a great read.
Published on January 12, 2019 13:06
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Tags:
fiction, genre-fiction, non-fiction, pratchett, reading, wodehouse
Comfort Books
When times are tough, or your own situation is going through a difficult patch, what books do you turn to for some comfort and cheer?
Do you look to escape for a while via the printed word or does that aspect not matter as long as you're reading?
I tend to turn to humour and this is where the wonderful books of P.G. Wodehouse and Terry Pratchett in particular come to the fore for me.
All of their work is capable of withstanding multiple re-readings and I usually pick up on gags, in-jokes etc., that I missed before. (I just do! I also don't believe I'm alone in that).
After humour, I turn to crime - reading wise that is! I adore Agatha Christie but I enjoy contemporary crime too. (See Wendy H Jones and Val Penny for more on these, especially if you like your stories set in Scotland).
After crime I turn to history and that can be a mixture of fiction and non-fiction. I've enjoyed Jennifer C. Wilson's Kindred Spirits series here as that combines a very different take on history with ghost stories.
By this stage, I'm usually looking for some non-fiction to get my reading "teeth" into and then I'm back to the funny works again.
Above all, I have a fabulous time doing all of this!
Whatever you read, especially now, enjoy. Take care, keep well, be kind, and God bless.
Do you look to escape for a while via the printed word or does that aspect not matter as long as you're reading?
I tend to turn to humour and this is where the wonderful books of P.G. Wodehouse and Terry Pratchett in particular come to the fore for me.
All of their work is capable of withstanding multiple re-readings and I usually pick up on gags, in-jokes etc., that I missed before. (I just do! I also don't believe I'm alone in that).
After humour, I turn to crime - reading wise that is! I adore Agatha Christie but I enjoy contemporary crime too. (See Wendy H Jones and Val Penny for more on these, especially if you like your stories set in Scotland).
After crime I turn to history and that can be a mixture of fiction and non-fiction. I've enjoyed Jennifer C. Wilson's Kindred Spirits series here as that combines a very different take on history with ghost stories.
By this stage, I'm usually looking for some non-fiction to get my reading "teeth" into and then I'm back to the funny works again.
Above all, I have a fabulous time doing all of this!
Whatever you read, especially now, enjoy. Take care, keep well, be kind, and God bless.
Published on March 21, 2020 14:35
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Tags:
books, christie, comfort-reading, fiction, jennifer-c-wilson, non-fiction, pratchett, val-penny, wendy-h-jones, wodehouse
Light Reading
Light reading is something I do all year round. When the world is being especially grim, as it is right now, then that’s the time to turn to books that help you escape.
I was not surprised the sales of Wodehouse rocked up during the pandemic. People need an escape and lighter reading can be a great way to have that escape. (Especially if you really can’t go anywhere to get that escape another way!).
Light reading for me also includes reading short stories and flash collections, no matter what their theme. I just love short reads (and getting plenty of value for money by having lots of stories in one book!).
I do wish genre fiction wasn’t looked down on by some. It is snobbery.
Genre fiction helps subsidize the more literary works and everyone has different tastes in books anyway.
I was not surprised the sales of Wodehouse rocked up during the pandemic. People need an escape and lighter reading can be a great way to have that escape. (Especially if you really can’t go anywhere to get that escape another way!).
Light reading for me also includes reading short stories and flash collections, no matter what their theme. I just love short reads (and getting plenty of value for money by having lots of stories in one book!).
I do wish genre fiction wasn’t looked down on by some. It is snobbery.
Genre fiction helps subsidize the more literary works and everyone has different tastes in books anyway.
Published on July 23, 2022 12:40
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Tags:
am-reading, an-writing, genre-fiction, light-reading, p-g, wodehouse
Books Of Letters
I love books of letters. I have books of letters by Evelyn Waugh (his own and those he exchanged with Nancy Mitford) and P.G. Wodehouse on my shelves (real and electronic). Yes, the letters do shed insights into the writing life which are fascinating and useful.
I also have a book of letters by Jane Austen and I must finish reading that so this post has proved useful in reminding me to do so!
I do so wish Agatha Christie had done this though. Am sure her letters would have been insightful. Having said that her The Moving Finger does have its plot focus around a string of poison pen letters so she brought them into her fiction at least!
What I like about letters are they do show something of the writer and the recipient. I’ve made use of this as a wiring technique in my Punish The Innocent (From Light to Dark and Back Again).
Good fun to do and it makes for a freshing change of story format but one I think best done sparingly. You do have to have strong characters to carry this off successfully.
Maybe that is why more writers haven’t produced books of their letters. They would rather get their characters to show you something of themselves rather than of the writers themselves.
What do you think?
I also have a book of letters by Jane Austen and I must finish reading that so this post has proved useful in reminding me to do so!
I do so wish Agatha Christie had done this though. Am sure her letters would have been insightful. Having said that her The Moving Finger does have its plot focus around a string of poison pen letters so she brought them into her fiction at least!
What I like about letters are they do show something of the writer and the recipient. I’ve made use of this as a wiring technique in my Punish The Innocent (From Light to Dark and Back Again).
Good fun to do and it makes for a freshing change of story format but one I think best done sparingly. You do have to have strong characters to carry this off successfully.
Maybe that is why more writers haven’t produced books of their letters. They would rather get their characters to show you something of themselves rather than of the writers themselves.
What do you think?
Published on July 06, 2024 08:04
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Tags:
agatha-christie, am-reading, am-writing, books-of-letters, evelyn-waugh, jane-austen, letters-as-a-writing-device, nancy-mitford, p-g, the-moving-finger, wodehouse
Next on the TBR Pile
Working out what to read next is probably the reader’s most difficult dilemma though it is a lovely one to have.
I mix up reading novels with short story and flash fiction collections. I also mix up the genres I read. I also like to mix up the mood of what I read. I also mix up reading classic and contemporary.
At the moment I’m happily reading some of P.G.Wodehouse’s works as I want a lighthearted read. Am loving getting into the stories of Jeeves and Wooster again.
Am currently reading Aunts Aren’t Gentlemen and I was delighted to come across a reference to Blandings Castle, the scene of some of my favourite Wodehouse stories with the lovely Lord Emsworth and the wonderful Uncle Fred.
Not just here but in series books, I love those little “nods” to other places the author writes about.
I see this a lot in Terry Pratchett’s Discworld too. In the fabulous Maskerade (a spoof of opera and The Phantom of the Opera especially), the Lancre witches come to Ankh-Morpork where so many of the other Discworld novels are set.
I love links like that and often I will find my dilemma about what to read next is solved because having read Maskerade again, for example, I wold probably go on to re-read one of the Sam Vimes books, the common link here being that fabulous fantasy city.
I mix up reading novels with short story and flash fiction collections. I also mix up the genres I read. I also like to mix up the mood of what I read. I also mix up reading classic and contemporary.
At the moment I’m happily reading some of P.G.Wodehouse’s works as I want a lighthearted read. Am loving getting into the stories of Jeeves and Wooster again.
Am currently reading Aunts Aren’t Gentlemen and I was delighted to come across a reference to Blandings Castle, the scene of some of my favourite Wodehouse stories with the lovely Lord Emsworth and the wonderful Uncle Fred.
Not just here but in series books, I love those little “nods” to other places the author writes about.
I see this a lot in Terry Pratchett’s Discworld too. In the fabulous Maskerade (a spoof of opera and The Phantom of the Opera especially), the Lancre witches come to Ankh-Morpork where so many of the other Discworld novels are set.
I love links like that and often I will find my dilemma about what to read next is solved because having read Maskerade again, for example, I wold probably go on to re-read one of the Sam Vimes books, the common link here being that fabulous fantasy city.
Published on August 24, 2024 09:57
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Tags:
am-reading, am-writing, pratchett, the-tbr-pile, wodehouse, working-out-what-to-read-next
Humorous Fiction
I have a very soft spot for humorous fiction, ranging from Jane Austen’s irony in Pride and Prejudice (in particular) all the way through to Wodehouse and Pratchett.
Story writing is challenging enough but to make it funny as well takes a particular skill set and one I think the world could do with much more of especially now. Well, let’s be honest, 2024 has not been a great year, has it?
So books and stories which make me laugh will always go down well with me. I do wish humorous fiction was taken more seriously, funny enough.
I’ve long held the view it is looked down on a bit because it “looks easy”, Big mistake there. I learned years ago if someone makes something look easy, that same someone has worked hard for years to get to that point.
For a writer to come up with funny lines for their characters, they have to know their creations inside out and ensure that what the characters speak is something which arises naturally out of the situation they’re in.
Nothing must seem forced in any book. It never works. Humour especially cannot be forced - readers literally won’t buy it. It’s the equivalent of laughing at your own jokes, which most of us don’t do.
But when a writer gets the humour right, it is sublime.
Story writing is challenging enough but to make it funny as well takes a particular skill set and one I think the world could do with much more of especially now. Well, let’s be honest, 2024 has not been a great year, has it?
So books and stories which make me laugh will always go down well with me. I do wish humorous fiction was taken more seriously, funny enough.
I’ve long held the view it is looked down on a bit because it “looks easy”, Big mistake there. I learned years ago if someone makes something look easy, that same someone has worked hard for years to get to that point.
For a writer to come up with funny lines for their characters, they have to know their creations inside out and ensure that what the characters speak is something which arises naturally out of the situation they’re in.
Nothing must seem forced in any book. It never works. Humour especially cannot be forced - readers literally won’t buy it. It’s the equivalent of laughing at your own jokes, which most of us don’t do.
But when a writer gets the humour right, it is sublime.
Published on November 09, 2024 05:58
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Tags:
am-reading, am-writing, austen, humorous-fiction, pratchett, pride-and-prejudice, wodehouse
Books For The Darker Times of Year
January can be the gloomiest month of the year. Christmas is over and it is still ages before spring turns up. It is a great time for getting more reading done though!
One of the simple delights in life is curling up with a good book in a cosy chair with a hot drink or several to hand.
For me, January is definitely not the time to be reading anything gloomy in itself. I want something to make me smile or laugh (Wodehouse, Pratchett and Austen are my go-tos for this).
I also like to read plenty of short fiction (it’s so often easier to find funny short stories tor flash fiction than novels - well that’s been my experience).
But if there is anything positive to be said for January, it is a good reading month. Escaping into a world contained in the pages of a book always seems like a good idea to me but never more so than when it is dark and cold outside.
One of the simple delights in life is curling up with a good book in a cosy chair with a hot drink or several to hand.
For me, January is definitely not the time to be reading anything gloomy in itself. I want something to make me smile or laugh (Wodehouse, Pratchett and Austen are my go-tos for this).
I also like to read plenty of short fiction (it’s so often easier to find funny short stories tor flash fiction than novels - well that’s been my experience).
But if there is anything positive to be said for January, it is a good reading month. Escaping into a world contained in the pages of a book always seems like a good idea to me but never more so than when it is dark and cold outside.
Published on January 11, 2025 09:22
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Tags:
am-reading, austen, comfort-reading, light-reading, pratchett, short-stories, wodehouse
Books and Their Moods
Now it’s no secret the books I read often depend on what mood I’m in.
When life is grim (and the news even more so), then I will usually go for humorous reads such as works by Wodehouse, Pratchett, and Austen, something I know will make me smile basically. I see it as having something lighter to counterbalance the darker side of life.
But books too have their moods and certain genres play on this to good effect - horror, crime, and thrillers, all indicate the moods of their stories to name but a few.
Now I’m one of those readers where I don’t want the mood the book to match my mood. I like that counterbalance though there are books I will always read regardless of what mood I’m in.
For example, I will always find time to re-read Agatha Christie or Josephine Tey’s The Daughter of Time (which is a fabulous book and the only novel to make me change my view on a historical person, in this case Richard III).
So which books do you use to lighten your mood?
Which ones do you read regardless of mood of book or your own mood?
When life is grim (and the news even more so), then I will usually go for humorous reads such as works by Wodehouse, Pratchett, and Austen, something I know will make me smile basically. I see it as having something lighter to counterbalance the darker side of life.
But books too have their moods and certain genres play on this to good effect - horror, crime, and thrillers, all indicate the moods of their stories to name but a few.
Now I’m one of those readers where I don’t want the mood the book to match my mood. I like that counterbalance though there are books I will always read regardless of what mood I’m in.
For example, I will always find time to re-read Agatha Christie or Josephine Tey’s The Daughter of Time (which is a fabulous book and the only novel to make me change my view on a historical person, in this case Richard III).
So which books do you use to lighten your mood?
Which ones do you read regardless of mood of book or your own mood?
Published on March 15, 2025 10:42
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Tags:
agatha-christie, am-reading, am-writing, austen, books-and-their-moods, josephine-tey, pratchett, the-daughter-of-time, wodehouse
Author Anniversaries - P.G. Wodehouse
Often when we think about author anniversaries, we’re commemorating the birth, sometimes the death, of globally renowned authors such as Jane Austen, Charles Dickens etc.
Or it can be the anniversary of when one of their most famous books was first published, you know the kind of thing here.
But 2025 sees a strange author anniversary for one writer and where the events took place within weeks of each other.
In early 1975 the wonderful humorous author, P.G Wodehouse was finally knighted. In February 2025, sadly he died. So this year sees the 50th anniversary of these things and the P.G. Wodehouse Society (UK) has been commemorating these. (I’m a member).
I love Wodehouse’s way with the English language. It is simply brilliant and his characters live on in your head long after you’ve finished reading the stories.
I even like Wodehouse’s golf stories and I hate the game as I do see it as a good walk ruined! There aren’t many writers who could achieve making someone read about a subject they are really not keen on. Even fewer can make them enjoy it!
Wodehouse’s characters live on in the forms of Jeeves and Wooster, Lord Emsworth, Uncle Fred, and so many more.
There are some books of letters out written by the great man too and they’re well worth a read as they’re a fascinating insight into the writing life he enjoyed.
You also get to see his wartime controversy from his viewpoint (and I would add had the Nazis got irony at the time Wodehouse would have been in real trouble. Check out the reproductions of his radio speeches which caused so much trouble and you will see what I mean).
But above all check out his stories, Especially when life is grim, and it is right now, they are a tonic and I happily recommend them just on those grounds.
Or it can be the anniversary of when one of their most famous books was first published, you know the kind of thing here.
But 2025 sees a strange author anniversary for one writer and where the events took place within weeks of each other.
In early 1975 the wonderful humorous author, P.G Wodehouse was finally knighted. In February 2025, sadly he died. So this year sees the 50th anniversary of these things and the P.G. Wodehouse Society (UK) has been commemorating these. (I’m a member).
I love Wodehouse’s way with the English language. It is simply brilliant and his characters live on in your head long after you’ve finished reading the stories.
I even like Wodehouse’s golf stories and I hate the game as I do see it as a good walk ruined! There aren’t many writers who could achieve making someone read about a subject they are really not keen on. Even fewer can make them enjoy it!
Wodehouse’s characters live on in the forms of Jeeves and Wooster, Lord Emsworth, Uncle Fred, and so many more.
There are some books of letters out written by the great man too and they’re well worth a read as they’re a fascinating insight into the writing life he enjoyed.
You also get to see his wartime controversy from his viewpoint (and I would add had the Nazis got irony at the time Wodehouse would have been in real trouble. Check out the reproductions of his radio speeches which caused so much trouble and you will see what I mean).
But above all check out his stories, Especially when life is grim, and it is right now, they are a tonic and I happily recommend them just on those grounds.
Published on March 22, 2025 13:59
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Tags:
am-reading, author-anniversaries, humorous-fiction, jeeves-and-wooster, lord-emsworth, p-g, uncle-fred, wodehouse