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Very good, Jeeves

Por: Tipo de material: TextoIdioma: en Editor: Salt Lake City, UT : Project Gutenberg, 2026Descripción: 1 online resource : multiple file formatsTipo de contenido:
  • text
Tipo de medio:
  • computer
Tipo de soporte:
  • online resource
Tema(s): Clasificación LoC:
  • PR
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
Jeeves and the impending doom -- The inferiority complex of old Sippy -- Jeeves and the Yuletide spirit -- Jeeves and the Song of songs -- Episode of the dog McIntosh -- The spot of art -- Jeeves and the kid Clementina -- The love that purifies -- Jeeves and the old school chum -- The Indian summer of an uncle -- Tuppy changes his mind.
Créditos de producción:
  • Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Resumen: "Very Good, Jeeves" by P. G. Wodehouse is a collection of comic short stories written in the early 20th century. It follows well-meaning but hapless aristocrat Bertie Wooster and his supremely capable valet Jeeves through a succession of country-house scrapes, romantic entanglements, and social imbroglios in the British upper class. Expect brisk farce, dazzling dialogue, and ingenious last-minute saves. The opening of the collection drops Bertie into Aunt Agatha’s country estate, where he must impress a cabinet minister while secretly aiding his pal Bingo Little, who is tutoring Bertie’s unruly cousin. The boy maroons the minister on an island; Jeeves coolly rescues him (outwitting a savage swan) and diverts suspicion from the culprit by letting Bertie take the blame—also neatly scotching a scheme to make Bertie the minister’s secretary and spiriting him away down a waterpipe. Next, an anxious magazine editor pal is too cowed by his old headmaster to reject dreary submissions or propose to the poet he loves; Bertie’s flour-based prank misfires, but Jeeves orchestrates a staged “accident” that sparks an engagement and restores the editor’s backbone—after which Bertie blunders into his own booby trap. At the start of the Christmas tale, Bertie cancels Monte Carlo to spend the holidays at a friend’s house, plots revenge on a prankster cousin and courts the hostess’s red-headed daughter, only to botch a needle-to-hot-water-bottle wheeze and get caught in the act by Sir Roderick Glossop—who, awkwardly, has swapped rooms and been forewarned (by Jeeves) of Bertie’s nocturnal prowl. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
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Release date is 2026-02-13

Jeeves and the impending doom -- The inferiority complex of old Sippy -- Jeeves and the Yuletide spirit -- Jeeves and the Song of songs -- Episode of the dog McIntosh -- The spot of art -- Jeeves and the kid Clementina -- The love that purifies -- Jeeves and the old school chum -- The Indian summer of an uncle -- Tuppy changes his mind.

Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

"Very Good, Jeeves" by P. G. Wodehouse is a collection of comic short stories written in the early 20th century. It follows well-meaning but hapless aristocrat Bertie Wooster and his supremely capable valet Jeeves through a succession of country-house scrapes, romantic entanglements, and social imbroglios in the British upper class. Expect brisk farce, dazzling dialogue, and ingenious last-minute saves.

The opening of the collection drops Bertie into Aunt Agatha’s country estate, where he must impress a cabinet minister while secretly aiding his pal Bingo Little, who is tutoring Bertie’s unruly cousin. The boy maroons the minister on an island; Jeeves coolly rescues him (outwitting a savage swan) and diverts suspicion from the culprit by letting Bertie take the blame—also neatly scotching a scheme to make Bertie the minister’s secretary and spiriting him away down a waterpipe. Next, an anxious magazine editor pal is too cowed by his old headmaster to reject dreary submissions or propose to the poet he loves; Bertie’s flour-based prank misfires, but Jeeves orchestrates a staged “accident” that sparks an engagement and restores the editor’s backbone—after which Bertie blunders into his own booby trap. At the start of the Christmas tale, Bertie cancels Monte Carlo to spend the holidays at a friend’s house, plots revenge on a prankster cousin and courts the hostess’s red-headed daughter, only to botch a needle-to-hot-water-bottle wheeze and get caught in the act by Sir Roderick Glossop—who, awkwardly, has swapped rooms and been forewarned (by Jeeves) of Bertie’s nocturnal prowl. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Originally published: Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc., 1926

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