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PG Wodehouse
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Ahtims
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Oct 20, 2012 06:40AM

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I got most of my collection handed over from my uncle..but been adding to it myself! Apart from Jeeves, Blandings series is my favorite!
Haven't tried the school series 'head of kays' and 'white feather' ..and others yet, though have stacked them up at home.

Wow Smitha I envy you! I have a dozen or so of his books in paperback and a few ebooks. I was scouring the net for some free ebooks when i found this
Onie wrote: "Smitha wrote: "I have his whole collection with me"
Wow Smitha I envy you! I have a dozen or so of his books in paperback and a few ebooks. I was scouring the net for some free ebooks when i found..."
thanks, Onie. I never knew he was known as Plum. I have a work of PGW known as Plum Punch and I used to wonder why it is named so! And I never knew he wrote musicals.
Wow Smitha I envy you! I have a dozen or so of his books in paperback and a few ebooks. I was scouring the net for some free ebooks when i found..."
thanks, Onie. I never knew he was known as Plum. I have a work of PGW known as Plum Punch and I used to wonder why it is named so! And I never knew he wrote musicals.

This discussion is making me feel guilty :(:(:(
better late than never. He is one of the best. Though you have to be someone who appreciates humor and slapdash comedy to read his books.

Is there any order for reading?"
Pallavi, you could start with Inimitable Jeeves.. for the Jeeves series.

Once does need a sense of humour to appreciate ..."
Haven't watched Gilligan's island, American humor for me is more of seinfeld variety..
Another classic example of British humor would be Henry Cecil... Not many people read him as well!


one more pg wodehouse fan here!
he has written so many that i still keep finding new ones. and i am so glad. i cannot sometimes fathom how he could do it. i mean ....some books have nearly exactly the same storyline and yet i read the book and am laughing aloud by the end........aloud....every single book i have read so far.......
what an extraordinary writer!
i recently read......
Uncle Fred in the Springtime
yes, story lines are almost identical and you know what will happen to Fred or Bertie next, still you eagerly await it to happen.

--Gussie, a glutton for punishment, stared at himself in the mirror.
--She laughed - a solo effort. Nothing in the prevailing circumstances made me feel like turning it into a duet.
--I’d always thought her half-baked, but now I think they didn’t even put her in the oven.
:)
Why do you think Wodehouse is not in demand now?
LOL, Onie. I also remember the guppie fishes and that beautiful halfwitted dame of Gussie's (forgot her name)



its lovely to see so many of you praising the Master..
as for me,I have just started reading PGW books and im liking it..
Does anyone of you have his ebooks? pls be kind enough to pass them on to me..
thnx..

..."
Oh definitely!! And it's even better with actual books too :)


For all first time readers would strongly recommend The Empress of Blandings series by PGW- guaranteed to make you laugh out loud! Just make sure you're not in a public place when you read them; I had built up quite a reputation as the demented airport woman due to my habit of chuckling away to myself in random corners of airports across the country with a PGW in hand.

I am in the process of shifting my PGW collection from my paternal home to my home. I have had many many 'laugh out loud' instances in public just because of PGW
I somehow had a major crush on PSmith - one of his minor heroes who starred only in 3 books or so


I'm planning to buy the complete Jeeves collection.
Thank you guys. :)


It doesn't mean I don't like Wodehouse but the basic storyline tends to be same in almost all of his works. And yes Mating Season is my favourite.
Yes, I too like PGW a lot, but I find most of his books repetitive and I can sort of surmise what will happen next.
R V-Qube wrote: "It depends on what one reads PGW for, I guess.
I read it for the language and the silly, imbecilic characters. I don't find the language repetitive. Small things like "Gussie, a glutton for punish..."
You summed it up correctly.
I read it for the language and the silly, imbecilic characters. I don't find the language repetitive. Small things like "Gussie, a glutton for punish..."
You summed it up correctly.
Books mentioned in this topic
Piccadilly Jim (other topics)Uncle Fred in the Springtime (other topics)