: P. G. Wodehouse
: Delphi Classics
: Delphi Collected Works of P. G. Wodehouse (Illustrated)
: Delphi Publishing Ltd
: 9781913487485
: 1
: CHF 2.40
:
: Comic, Cartoon, Humor, Satire
: English
: 7565
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: ePUB

An English comic novelist and short story writer, P. G. Wodehouse is best known as the creator of the young bachelor Bertie Wooster and his effortlessly superior manservant Jeeves. Wodehouse penned over 90 books and secured a devoted readership across the world. His first success came as a writer of public school stories, based on his own childhood experiences, most notably introducing the strikingly original character, Psmith. These were followed by light romances, but in 1913, with the publication of the first Blandings Castle novel, 'Something New', he turned to farce, which became his preferred genre of work. Wodehouse is celebrated for his scholarly command of the English sentence, blended with vivid, far-fetched imagery and the uproarious slang of the late Edwardian era. His novels feature highly complicated plots and hilarious situations, revealing the hand of a master humorist. This comprehensive eBook offers the most complete edition possible of P. G. Wodehouse, with numerous illustrations, rare texts, informative introductions and the usual Delphi bonus material. (Version 2)


* Beautifully illustrated with images relating to Wodehouse's life and works
* Concise introductions to the major works
* All 31 novels in the US public domain, with individual contents tables
* Features rare novels appearing for the first time in digital publishing, including 'Sam the Sudden' - one of the author's personal favourites
* Both versions of the first Blandings Castle novel: 'Something New' and 'Something Fresh'
* Images of how the books were first published, giving your eReader a taste of the original texts
* Excellent formatting of the texts
* Rare uncollected short stories available in no other eBook
* Special chronological and alphabetical contents tables for the short stories
* Easily locate the stories you want to read
* Features a selection of Wodehouse's musical dramas
* Includes Wodehouse's non-fiction book 'Louder and Funnier', with numerous essays and articles
* Ordering of texts into chronological order and genres
* Updated with two novels and two short story collections, now available in the US public domain for the first time


CONTENTS:


The Novels
The Pothunters (1902)
A Prefect's Uncle (1903)
The Gold Bat (1904)
William Tell Told Again (1904)
The Head of Kay's (1905)
Love among the Chickens (1906)
The White Feather (1907)
Not George Washington (1907)
The Swoop! (1909)
Mike (1909)
A Gentleman of Leisure (1910)
Psmith in the City (1910)
The Prince and Betty (1912)
The Little Nugget (1913)
Psmith, Journalist (1915)
Something New (1915)
Something Fresh (1915)
Uneasy Money (1916)
Piccadilly Jim (1918)
A Damsel in Distress (1919)
The Coming of Bill (1920)
Jill the Reckless (1921)
Indiscretions of Archie (1921)
The Girl on the Boat (1922)
The Adventures of Sally (1922)
The Inimitable Jeeves (1923)
Leave It to Psmith (1923)
Bill the Conqueror (1924)
Sam the Sudden (1925)
The Small Bachelor (1927)
Money for Nothing (1928)


The Short Story Collections
Tales of St. Austin's (1903)
The Man Upstairs (1914)
The Man with Two Left Feet (1917)
My Man Jeeves (1919)
The Clicking of Cuthbert (1922)
Ukridge (1924)
Carry On, Jeeves (1925)
The Heart of a Goof (1926)
Meet Mr. Mulliner (1927)
Uncollected Short Stories


The Short Stories
List of Short Stories in Chronological Order
List of Short Stories in Alphabetical Order


The Musicals
Have a Heart (1913)
Oh Lady! Lady! (1918)


The Non-Fiction
Louder and Funnier (1932)

1. PATIENT PERSEVERANCE PRODUCES PUGILISTIC PRODIGIES


WHEREHAVEI seen that face before?’ said a voice. Tony Graham looked up from his bag.

‘Hullo, Allen,’ he said, ‘what the dickens are you up here for?’

‘I was rather thinking of doing a little boxing. If you’ve no objection, of course.’

‘But you ought to be on a bed of sickness, and that sort of thing. I heard you’d crocked yourself.’

‘So I did. Nothing much, though. Trod on myself during a game of fives, and twisted my ankle a bit.’

‘In for the middles, of course?’

‘Yes.’

‘So am I.’

‘Yes, so I saw in the Sportsman. It says you weigh eleven-three.’

‘Bit more, really, I believe. Shan’t be able to have any lunch, or I shall have to go in for the heavies. What are you?’

‘Just eleven. Well, let’s hope we meet in the final.’

‘Rather,’ said Tony.

It was at Aldershot — to be more exact, in the dressing-room of the Queen’s Avenue Gymnasium at Aldershot — that the conversation took place. From east and west, and north and south, from Dan even unto Beersheba, the representatives of the public schools had assembled to box, fence, and perform gymnastic prodigies for fame and silver medals. The room was full of all sorts and sizes of them, heavy-weights looking ponderous and muscular, feather-weights diminutive but wiry, light-weights, middle-weights, fencers, and gymnasts in scores, some wearing the unmistakable air of the veteran, for whom Aldershot has no mysteries, others nervous, and wishing themselves back again at school.

Tony Graham had chosen a corner near the door. This was his first appearance at Aldershot. St Austin’s was his School, and he was by far the best middle-weight there. But his doubts as to his ability to hold his own against all-comers were extreme, nor were they lessened by the knowledge that his cousin, Allen Thomson, was to be one of his opponents. Indeed, if he had not been a man of mettle, he might well have thought that with Allen’s advent his chances were at an end.

Allen was at Rugby. He was the son of a baronet who owned many acres in Wiltshire, and held fixed opinions on the subject of the whole duty of man, who, he held, should be before anything else a sportsman. Both the Thomsons — Allen’s brother Jim was at St Austin’s in the same House as Tony — were good at most forms of sport. Jim, however, had never taken to the art of boxing very kindly, but, by way of compensation, Allen had skill enough for two. He was a splendid boxer, quick, neat, scientific. He had been up to Aldershot three times, once as a feather-weight and twice as a light-weight, and each time he had returned with the silver medal.

As for Tony, he was more a fighter than a sparrer. When he paid a visit to his uncle’s house he boxed with Allen daily, and invariably got the worst of it. Allen was too quick for him. But he was clever with his hands. His supply of pluck was inexhaustible, and physically he was as hard as nails.

‘Is your ankle all right again, now?’ he asked.

‘Pretty well. It wasn’t much of a sprain. Interfered with my training a good bit, though. I ought by rights to be well under eleven stone. You’re all right, I suppose?’

‘Not bad. Boxing takes it out of you more than footer or a race. I was in good footer training long before I started to get fit for Aldershot. But I think I ought to get along fairly well. Any idea who’s in against us?’

‘Harrow, Felsted, Wellington. That’s all, I think.’

‘St Paul’s?’

‘No.’

‘Good. Well, I hope your first man mops you up. I’ve a conscientious objection to scrapping with you.’

Allen laughed. ‘You’d be all right,’ he said, ‘if you weren’t so beastly slow with your guard. Why don’t you wake up? You hit like blazes.’

‘I think I shall start guarding two seconds before you lead. By the way, don’t have any false delicacy about spoiling my aristocratic features. On the ground of relationship, you know.’

‘Rather not. Let auld acquaintance be forgot. I’m not Thom