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Synopsis This study of the life of P.G. Wodehouse (1881-1975), creator of the immortal Bertie Wooster and his butler Jeeves, seeks to penetrate the mind of a man who is difficult in some ways to fathom. Wodehouse's uneventful life--the life of a wealthy man of leisure who just happened to write brilliantly funny novels--was punctuated by the WW2 episode in which, interned by the Germans, he made facetious broadcasts for them that gave the impression that maybe they weren't such bad chaps, after all. Wodehouse's naïve misjudgment made him unpopular in his native England, and was the cause of his eventual move to Long Island early in the '50s. Robert McCrum explores this incident and also the novels, and joins the chorus of those who consider the Bertie-and-Jeeves books to be not merely hilarious trifles but semi-serious examinations of the varieties of human nuttiness in the tradition of Jane Austen.
| Size | | Length: | 542 pages | | Height: | 8.0 in | | Width: | 5.5 in | | Thickness: | 1.5 in | | Weight: | 17.6 oz |
Industry Reviews "[McCrum] sees the Berlin episode as crucial, a series of events in which Wodehouse brought disaster on himself like a hero in the Green tragedies with which he became so well acquainted at school. Robert McCrum arranges the rest of his material round this central episode. It is a good story, very well told. This is the most persuasive life of Wodehouse so far. He doesn't resolve the central conundrum about the artist's moral responsibilities because it can't be resolved...." Literary Review - Peter Washington (09/01/2004)
"A graceful biography of the most British of all humorous novelists....[C]aptures the warmth and charm of a man who wanted only to amuse....[A[ fitting tribute to one of the great purveyors of light--though not insubstantial--entertainment." Kirkus (09/15/2004)
"For balance and readability, this popular biography, like Jeeves, stands alone." Publishers Weekly (08/30/2004)
"However immensely lovable Wodehouse's writing is, it was not the output of an immensely lovable man....So Mr. McCrum, the literary editor of The Observer, faces formidable obstacles here--not least of them the existence of numerous other Wodehouse biographies, including a couple of recent ones. But he surmounts them with an invaluable portrait, thanks to a broad, incisive and complex understanding of Wodehouse's psyche. He also adroitly balances analysis of life and literature, mingling them aptly when necessary." New York Times - Janet Maslin (11/11/2004)
"McCrum tells the story judiciously....The dramatic center of the book is...the broadcasts Wodehouse made on Nazi radio during the Second World War. McCrum shows how Wodehouse was bamboozled...." New Yorker (11/15/2004)
"...McCrum...is an engaging writer and he knows his Wodehouse. He's a discerning and reliable guide to the fiction, and he also gives us a very full account of Wodehouse's other career, as a lyricist for Broadway shows." New York Times Book Review - Charles McGrath (12/05/2004)
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