Reviews

The Best of Wodehouse: An Anthology by P.G. Wodehouse, John Mortimer

deanagrummons's review against another edition

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4.0

3.75 stars
Really enjoyed the Jeeves stories the best.

tzadik's review against another edition

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5.0

Pure, unadulterated literary comfort food. Every page is at least good for a smile or a grin, and often a snigger or out-loud belly laugh. Also incredibly well-written by an absolute master at his craft. For some reason we tend to value the tragic over the comic and the serious over the humorous, but stylistically this is at a level with the likes of Dickens or even Shakespeare. Wonderful.

b_harrison's review against another edition

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funny lighthearted relaxing
  • Loveable characters? Yes

4.0

atroskity's review against another edition

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4.0

I skipped over the novels in this collection, as I have them in separate volumes, and stuck to the short stories.

A great introduction to someone who is fast becoming a favorite.

doug_whatzup's review against another edition

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5.0

“Too little has been written about vaudeville bird-imitators and their passionate devotion to their art: but everybody knows the saying, Once a Bird-Imitator, Always a Bird-Imitator. The Mabel Potter of today might be a mere lovely machine for taking notes and tapping out her employer’s correspondence, but within her there still burned the steady flame of those high ideals which always animate a girl who has once been accustomed to render to packed houses the liquid notes of the cuckoo, the whip-poor-will, and other songsters who are familiar to you all.” If you find this paragraph, from “The Nodder,” a hoot, you’re going to love reading Wodehouse.

I read the above paragraph to my wife, who found it “weird.” I, on the other hand, couldn’t stop laughing, and now have it practically memorized. Everything Wodehouse writes is like this – okay, the humor of his Jeeves stories is slightly less broad – so you’re either going to find his writing constantly amusing or constantly weird.

Obviously, my wife and I are in different camps.

This anthology makes for a nice introduction to Wodehouse's brand of humor, but it hardly does justice to one of the last century's most prolific writers. While I particularly enjoyed the short stories, of which there are 14 here, and the sections from the autobiographical "Over Seventy," I was a tad overwhelmed by the anthology's two full-length novels, The Code of the Woosters and Uncle Fred in the Springtime. The novels are on the short side, which is good, because they are best read in one sitting, with a few breaks as possible, at least for a guy of my advance years whose synapses don't fire like they used to. They're a sort of literary whack-a-mole, with characters popping in and out and complications piling up one after the other until the reader begins to lose faith that it can somehow be sorted out. I'm not certain that, in the end, Uncle Fred actually did sort everything out in the springtime, but no matter. I found myself constantly amused.

Ideally, immediately following "one after another" above, a footnote would be added explaining how managed to keep all those balls simultaneously airborne. In "Over Seventy" he explains that he spends months outlining and refining his plotlines before actually putting pen (or rather pencil) to paper.

I'll be reading more Wodehouse, I'm sure, and my wife will simply have to tolerate the chuckling emanating from the next pillow over. I may, however, be making notes as I go.

lewfode's review

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4.0

A good Wodehouse compendium. I love what a twit Bertie is, and how ridiculous the problems of the main characters are. And of course, Jeeves always saves the day -- and gets his way in the end. This book also includes some stories about other Wodehouse characters, which were fun in their own right. I really liked "Uncle Fred Flits By". A light and fun read.
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