I've read some Wodehouse, but I can't remember which ones; my favorite character is Bertie Wooster because he seems like a genuinely kind person. I'm not really a fan of Wodehouse, though, because I get a little tired of the female characters being portrayed as either joyless b-words or so desperate to get a man they're willing to force him into marriage whether or not he even likes them, much less wants to spend the rest of his life with them. I can see the humor in the different shenanigans that Bertie has to muddle through in order to get out of these situations, but the ruthless way these women treat poor Bertie leaves a bad taste in my mouth. YMMV. Sir Terry Prachett is my go-to for humor. I also like Mark Twain, Douglas Adams, Rita Mae Brown, Robert Lynn Asprin, and the Raffles stories too.
@@seileach67 Aunt Dahlia is neither of those things. And the men are portrayed the same. They can be bullies, whomps, or desperate to marry. I love them all.
@@janetsmith8566 You may be thinking of The Mating Season, a Bertie/Jeeves novel. "As far as the eye could reach, I found myself gazing on a surging sea of aunts. There were tall aunts, short aunts, stout aunts, thin aunts, and an aunt who was carrying on a conversation in a low voice to which nobody seemed to be paying the slightest attention. I was to learn later that this was Miss Emmeline Deverill's habitual practice, she being the aunt of whom Corky had spoken as the dotty one. From start to finish of every meal she soliloquized. Shakespeare would have liked her." LOL!
He made me laugh out loud for the first time ever in my life! And he still does. Never happened with any other author. Now, I often listen to recordings. And the stories still make me laugh. And, believe me when I say, no one would describe me as a 'happy chappy.'
Wodehouse is probably my favorite author. He has caused me to laugh out loud as well, and not something I do often :) Aunt Dahlia is my favorite character, although Ukridge and Uncle Fred are delightful as well.
Somehow only discovered Wodehouse this year and have devoured 12 of his books in the last few months. Absolutely love them. I find I read so many books that are on the more depressing and dark side that Wodehouse's silliness and playfulness is such a welcome addition. Great video and super interesting about Milne, somewhat unbelievable that he could be so mean spirited and come out with Winnie the Pooh!
Right again on the P.GW.Books. Recently read some of the early Jeeves and Worster brilliant from the first. The stuff from his interment was great. Again thanks. "Good on ya'"if I may?
Just watched this with my siblings - we are Wodehouse fans and it made our day! I did not know all that backstory with Milne either, very fascinating (and sad).
Hi Marian, so good to hear from you. Love that you are a Wodehouse fan. Just to let you know, you can get the transcripts of his prisoner of war broadcasts online. They are very amusing.
Oh I do love Wodehouse! I even named my tuxedo cat Jeeves :) I was tickled imagining your outburst of humor on the bus and could relate to it. A while back, I was reading _Miss Buncle Married_ at a local coffee shop, when my own funny bone was tickled. I could not restrain my guffaws, nor the tears streaming down my face. I felt embarrassed but really, humor is so good for the soul!
Thorne Smith had me laughing so hard late at night that my sister (sharing a hotel room) was very nearly reduced to violence to shut me up. I still have all his books.
I've read 60 Wodehouse books this far and plan to read them all. Psmith, Jeeves and Wooster, Uncle Fred, Blandings and several of the standalones ( Sam the Sudden and those that feature Chimp Twist and Dolly and Soapy Malloy) are my favorites.
Love Wodehouse. And I see what you did there: “talented with the old pen and ink.” Sounds exactly like Bertie. You’ve surely read him, but Saki (H.H. Monroe) is also hilarious and a tiny bit creepy as well.
😀 BINGO! ... did you see what I did there as well? (Bingo Little.) OK that was terrible.🤣 Do you know, I have no Saki on my shelves! Must correct that.
I love P.G. Wodehouse. One of my favorite book quotes is from My Man Jeeves: She fitted into my biggest arm-chair as if it had been built round her by someone who knew they were wearing arm-chairs tight about the hips that season. Another is from Tried in the Furnace: "I say! I mean, I say. I say, dash it, you know. I mean, dash it," said Balmy, feeling, even as he spoke, that the rebuke had not been phrased as neatly as he could have wished. I would say Bill Bryson comes closest, at times, to Wodehouse. He writes along, all straight and quiet... then throws in an unexpected zinger that makes you burst out loud laughing.
This was utterly delightful! Well presented sir! (Commenting for the algorithm! ^_~) Purchased myself an old orange penguin copy of Pigs Have Wings from a book stall underneath a bridge in London some years ago and am now eyeing it for the next read. Have always loved Wodehouse through the adaptations but haven't actually read him.
Hey Lorianne, thanks so much for helping me with the algorithm. I love the Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie adaptation of Jeeves and Wooster. Hope you enjoy reading Pigs Have Wings, it is a great story. No matter how good the adaptation though, Wodehouse's turn of phrase in narration is just too good to not to read. Let me know your thoughts on it.👍😀
Oh I hope that you enjoy him. Good places to start with Wodehouse would be: Joy In The Morning - Jeeves and Wooster Pigs Have Wings - Blandings Series Psmith In The City Love Among The Chickens
Can you believe that someone who can write Winnie the Pooh could turn out to be so sinister?! Have you ever read any of the Blandings novels or Psmith?👍😀
Tristan! How have I missed this video? We've chatted about Wodehouse on Patreon and I had no idea you had a video on Wodehouse! What a wonderful surprise to find this! I've been collecting the Everyman's editions they are the most charming books! I was introduced to Jeeves and Wooster by the Fry and Laurie series in the early 90s and I have been in love with Wodehouse ever since. Brilliant video! - Michele
Oh my goodness, I had almost forgotten how funny Wodehouse actually was. If you're looking for another great audiobook performer who does both the characters of Jeeves and Bertie incredible justice, may I also highly recommend Jonathan Cecil? I almost feel, whenever I listen to a good Jeeves book, or any other from the Wodehouse catalogue, that I can engage with the characters and their exploits with such ease that it feels like I'm actually involved with them somehow. Thanks for the brilliant summary!
Wodehouse is the cat's pyjamas. Does anyone else put words together like that? I don't know about you but the way i hear Bertie Wooster in my heads cannot be captured properly by any narrator. Hugh Laurie comes the closest in the TV series with Stephen Fry.
I just laughed and smiled through this review. I absolutely love Wodehouse. I dont have a favorite character as of yet because I have only read 2 of his books and need to buy more, but I loved Blanding's castle. I dont know how he thought of the pickles to put pepole in. He's genius! I believe he's the only comedy I have read. 🤔 Good day Captain
Hiya Mandy, I am so sorry for my late response, life gets quite hectic. Blandings is terrific. I love Galahad Threepwood. He is so gregarious and upbeat.Also the contrived scenarios are fantastic.
Oh I am the phantom who has never read anything by Wodehouse! Great summary, and now I will of course pick a book by him up, for my only other brushes with humor have been Oscar Wilde's The Canterville Ghost, and The Importance of Being Earnest. I know Shirley Jackson is not known for comedy, but her book The Sundial, which I read some weeks ago, is very funny, and a great read otherwise as well, which just about sums up my experience of reading books that have made me laugh.
Adding to this comment a day after I posted it after noticing Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K Jerome on my shelf, and I remembered just how much it made me laugh. I was only fourteen when I read it though, so no promises.
Importance of Being Ernest is epic. Have you seen the Colin Firth and Rupert Everett film adaptation? I Hope that you enjoy Wodehouse. Some good places to start are: Joy In The Morning - Jeeves and Wooster Pigs Have Wings - Blandings Series Psmith In The City
Woohoo, Jerome K Jerome!!! I love that fellow. If you like Jerome, I feel that you will heartily chuckle at Wodehouse. You may even become an addict. Let me know how you get on, Tee.😀
OH YES I have seen the adaptation! I was on a Colin Firth binge last year, I love him so much. And thank you for the Wodehouse starter recommendations! I looked through his books but was so confused since he has so many, so I'll do as you say. Looking forward to this 💚
I adore Wodehouse but as somebody else has said PLEASE read Saki. And Damon Runyon's stories are a must. I also love "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" by Anita Loos, which is amazing, considering when it was written.
You are the third person I have heard to say they laughed out loud while on public transit reading Wodehouse. Must be a thing, I giggle. I heartily agree with his comedy (can't beat English humour) and will always promote his books for someone looking for some tongue in cheek entertainment. Certainly classic reads. I love the look of those hardcovers and regret they were too hard for me to get hold of. However the omnibus editions that came out in the early1990's are a neat collection of tidy volumes with good reading order. Off the top of head, the only other author that springs to mind atm that made me giggle is Douglas Adams, who wrote the well known Hitchhikers Guide series most of us read, and Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency (I read the omnibus edition).
To quote Bertie Wooster "Well knock me down with an F." who'd have thought that public transport and Wodehouse would be so intertwined. Douglas Adams is amazing.
Evelyn Waugh said that P.G. Wodehouse's idyllic world would never grow stale, and that he had created a world for people to live in and enjoy. Waugh said, "Mr. Wodehouse's idyllic world can never stale. He will continue to release future generations from captivity that may be more irksome than our own. He has made a world for us to live in and delight in".
I named my robot vacuum Jeeves. Bertie is a joy. I just finished Our Doris by Charles Heathcote and look forward to reading more Doris. Jane Smiley's Moo and Richard Russo's Straight Man were great send ups of Academia. Florida comedy writers, Hiassen, Barry and Dorsey. Yes, comedy is best when broad.
I also listened to the Winnie the Pooh books, both in narrative form and dramatized, having no idea Wodehouse and Milne had ever been friends. Stephen Fry did one of the voices on the dramatized version.
Hi Tristan! Is it alright if I make a request/suggestion for a future video? I was wondering if you could do one about some of the characters in War and peace and the personalities and flaws of each. Would you to see you go through some of them
Thanks for the suggestion Lauren. You picked a book with a lot of characters😂 I have yet to do any videos on characters, this is a super idea. Thank you so much.
Yes. I suppose PG Wodehouse and Jane Austen are my favourite authors. Of course you are right about Wodehouse’s brilliantly funny writing. Lord Emsworth is my favourite character. I try to emulate him as far as possible, though I lack the wealth and live in a semi-detached house in Leamington Spa rather than a castle in Shropshire, However, I admit that I don’t aspire to keeping a pig.
You really must give Woddehouse a go. He writes the English goofball better than anybody. He was insanely popular in America and Europe as he defined the English as the World prefers to imagine them.
Hey Tristan this is Jason from the U.S. on your instagram. I haven't read Wodehouse yet and was thinking of starting with The Code of the Woosters. Would that be an ok starting point?
Hiya Jason, great to hear from you. Code of the Woosters is amazing. but I would recommend The Mating Season first as the Code of the Woosters picks up from events in that book. So by all means start with those. I hope that you enjoy yourself.😀👍
Have you read any Wodehouse? Who are your favourite characters? Which other comedy authors do you love?
I've read some Wodehouse, but I can't remember which ones; my favorite character is Bertie Wooster because he seems like a genuinely kind person. I'm not really a fan of Wodehouse, though, because I get a little tired of the female characters being portrayed as either joyless b-words or so desperate to get a man they're willing to force him into marriage whether or not he even likes them, much less wants to spend the rest of his life with them. I can see the humor in the different shenanigans that Bertie has to muddle through in order to get out of these situations, but the ruthless way these women treat poor Bertie leaves a bad taste in my mouth. YMMV.
Sir Terry Prachett is my go-to for humor. I also like Mark Twain, Douglas Adams, Rita Mae Brown, Robert Lynn Asprin, and the Raffles stories too.
@@seileach67
Aunt Dahlia is neither of those things. And the men are portrayed the same. They can be bullies, whomps, or desperate to marry. I love them all.
Also aunt Dahlia…. And the five aunts all together- I can’t remember which story!
@@janetsmith8566 You may be thinking of The Mating Season, a Bertie/Jeeves novel. "As far as the eye could reach, I found myself gazing on a surging sea of aunts. There were tall aunts, short aunts, stout aunts, thin aunts, and an aunt who was carrying on a conversation in a low voice to which nobody seemed to be paying the slightest attention. I was to learn later that this was Miss Emmeline Deverill's habitual practice, she being the aunt of whom Corky had spoken as the dotty one. From start to finish of every meal she soliloquized. Shakespeare would have liked her." LOL!
It's Johnathan Cecil for me that is the best at reading Jeeves and Wooster novels. Absolutely embodies it.
He made me laugh out loud for the first time ever in my life! And he still does. Never happened with any other author.
Now, I often listen to recordings. And the stories still make me laugh. And, believe me when I say, no one would describe me as a 'happy chappy.'
Wodehouse is probably my favorite author. He has caused me to laugh out loud as well, and not something I do often :) Aunt Dahlia is my favorite character, although Ukridge and Uncle Fred are delightful as well.
He is a hoot! I think my favourite character is Psmith. Although I deep love Wooster too.
Somehow only discovered Wodehouse this year and have devoured 12 of his books in the last few months. Absolutely love them. I find I read so many books that are on the more depressing and dark side that Wodehouse's silliness and playfulness is such a welcome addition. Great video and super interesting about Milne, somewhat unbelievable that he could be so mean spirited and come out with Winnie the Pooh!
He's a genius isn't he?😀
I know- recent discovery. Where has he been all my life???
Patty-I agree. It is amazing that he created such a sweet series.
Right again on the P.GW.Books. Recently read some of the early Jeeves and Worster brilliant from the first. The stuff from his interment was great. Again thanks. "Good on ya'"if I may?
P.G is the cats pyjamas! His internment broadcasts were so witty.
Its his cockeyed yet true observations that keep bringing me back to him. Who needs a plot when you have Wodehouse?
Just watched this with my siblings - we are Wodehouse fans and it made our day! I did not know all that backstory with Milne either, very fascinating (and sad).
Hi Marian, so good to hear from you. Love that you are a Wodehouse fan. Just to let you know, you can get the transcripts of his prisoner of war broadcasts online. They are very amusing.
Oh I do love Wodehouse! I even named my tuxedo cat Jeeves :) I was tickled imagining your outburst of humor on the bus and could relate to it. A while back, I was reading _Miss Buncle Married_ at a local coffee shop, when my own funny bone was tickled. I could not restrain my guffaws, nor the tears streaming down my face. I felt embarrassed but really, humor is so good for the soul!
Bingo Little is hilarious with his ever-revolving romantic flings! Sometimes you want to smack him though! PG Wodehouse is pure comedy gold!
I am so sorry for my late response, life gets quite hectic. I forgot about Bingo Little. He is eye-wateringly funny.
Thorne Smith had me laughing so hard late at night that my sister (sharing a hotel room) was very nearly reduced to violence to shut me up. I still have all his books.
Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons was one that made me splutter and weep with laughter throughout! Will return to Wodehouse with your recommendation
I've read 60 Wodehouse books this far and plan to read them all. Psmith, Jeeves and Wooster, Uncle Fred, Blandings and several of the standalones ( Sam the Sudden and those that feature Chimp Twist and Dolly and Soapy Malloy) are my favorites.
Love Wodehouse. And I see what you did there: “talented with the old pen and ink.” Sounds exactly like Bertie.
You’ve surely read him, but Saki (H.H. Monroe) is also hilarious and a tiny bit creepy as well.
😀 BINGO! ... did you see what I did there as well? (Bingo Little.) OK that was terrible.🤣 Do you know, I have no Saki on my shelves! Must correct that.
Lynne Truss's "Eats, Shoots and Leaves" had me in stitches. How can punctuation be so hilarious? But in Truss's hands, it is!
I agree. Wodehouse is the best of the best.
No one else comes close, di they?! 😂❤️
He has got me through a lot of grim times. A genius.
I love P.G. Wodehouse. One of my favorite book quotes is from My Man Jeeves:
She fitted into my biggest arm-chair as if it had been built round her by someone who knew they were wearing arm-chairs tight about the hips that season.
Another is from Tried in the Furnace:
"I say! I mean, I say. I say, dash it, you know. I mean, dash it," said Balmy, feeling, even as he spoke, that the rebuke had not been phrased as neatly as he could have wished.
I would say Bill Bryson comes closest, at times, to Wodehouse. He writes along, all straight and quiet... then throws in an unexpected zinger that makes you burst out loud laughing.
Delightful video! I've never read Wodehouse, but you've encouraged me to start.
Please do. You will be so very glad you did.
Also try wodehouse audiobook read by Johnathan Cecil. To me, it's more effective than antidepressants! I've listened over and over every day.
This was utterly delightful! Well presented sir! (Commenting for the algorithm! ^_~) Purchased myself an old orange penguin copy of Pigs Have Wings from a book stall underneath a bridge in London some years ago and am now eyeing it for the next read. Have always loved Wodehouse through the adaptations but haven't actually read him.
Hey Lorianne, thanks so much for helping me with the algorithm. I love the Stephen Fry and Hugh Laurie adaptation of Jeeves and Wooster. Hope you enjoy reading Pigs Have Wings, it is a great story. No matter how good the adaptation though, Wodehouse's turn of phrase in narration is just too good to not to read. Let me know your thoughts on it.👍😀
I have never heard of this author, definitely I will looking for his works. Thanks Tristan for the recommendation.
Oh I hope that you enjoy him. Good places to start with Wodehouse would be:
Joy In The Morning - Jeeves and Wooster
Pigs Have Wings - Blandings Series
Psmith In The City
Love Among The Chickens
@@tristanandtheclassics6538 Thanks Tristan for the recommendation 😊
Love Jeeves and Wooster
That's interesting about Milne 👀
Can you believe that someone who can write Winnie the Pooh could turn out to be so sinister?! Have you ever read any of the Blandings novels or Psmith?👍😀
But what about Jonathan Cecil’s recordings?!? He is amazing and captures all the characters perfectly!!
Tristan! How have I missed this video? We've chatted about Wodehouse on Patreon and I had no idea you had a video on Wodehouse! What a wonderful surprise to find this! I've been collecting the Everyman's editions they are the most charming books! I was introduced to Jeeves and Wooster by the Fry and Laurie series in the early 90s and I have been in love with Wodehouse ever since. Brilliant video! - Michele
Oh my goodness, I had almost forgotten how funny Wodehouse actually was. If you're looking for another great audiobook performer who does both the characters of Jeeves and Bertie incredible justice, may I also highly recommend Jonathan Cecil? I almost feel, whenever I listen to a good Jeeves book, or any other from the Wodehouse catalogue, that I can engage with the characters and their exploits with such ease that it feels like I'm actually involved with them somehow. Thanks for the brilliant summary!
Wodehouse is the cat's pyjamas. Does anyone else put words together like that? I don't know about you but the way i hear Bertie Wooster in my heads cannot be captured properly by any narrator.
Hugh Laurie comes the closest in the TV series with Stephen Fry.
@@tristanandtheclassics6538 maybe you could consider a read-along to give your interpretation?
I just laughed and smiled through this review. I absolutely love Wodehouse. I dont have a favorite character as of yet because I have only read 2 of his books and need to buy more, but I loved Blanding's castle. I dont know how he thought of the pickles to put pepole in. He's genius!
I believe he's the only comedy I have read. 🤔
Good day Captain
Hiya Mandy, I am so sorry for my late response, life gets quite hectic. Blandings is terrific. I love Galahad Threepwood. He is so gregarious and upbeat.Also the contrived scenarios are fantastic.
I have one book of his I still haven’t read! I will definitely get to it. Loving your videos Tristan!
Hey Lorraine! Awesome to hear from you. Pleased you still have some Wodehouse to enjoy.😀
Oh I am the phantom who has never read anything by Wodehouse! Great summary, and now I will of course pick a book by him up, for my only other brushes with humor have been Oscar Wilde's The Canterville Ghost, and The Importance of Being Earnest. I know Shirley Jackson is not known for comedy, but her book The Sundial, which I read some weeks ago, is very funny, and a great read otherwise as well, which just about sums up my experience of reading books that have made me laugh.
Adding to this comment a day after I posted it after noticing Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K Jerome on my shelf, and I remembered just how much it made me laugh. I was only fourteen when I read it though, so no promises.
Importance of Being Ernest is epic. Have you seen the Colin Firth and Rupert Everett film adaptation?
I Hope that you enjoy Wodehouse. Some good places to start are:
Joy In The Morning - Jeeves and Wooster
Pigs Have Wings - Blandings Series
Psmith In The City
Woohoo, Jerome K Jerome!!! I love that fellow. If you like Jerome, I feel that you will heartily chuckle at Wodehouse. You may even become an addict. Let me know how you get on, Tee.😀
OH YES I have seen the adaptation! I was on a Colin Firth binge last year, I love him so much. And thank you for the Wodehouse starter recommendations! I looked through his books but was so confused since he has so many, so I'll do as you say. Looking forward to this 💚
I adore Wodehouse but as somebody else has said PLEASE read Saki. And Damon Runyon's stories are a must. I also love "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" by Anita Loos, which is amazing, considering when it was written.
Thanks. I love Wodehouse and Damon Runyon. I will have a look at Saki and “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes”.
You are the third person I have heard to say they laughed out loud while on public transit reading Wodehouse. Must be a thing, I giggle.
I heartily agree with his comedy (can't beat English humour) and will always promote his books for someone looking for some tongue in cheek entertainment. Certainly classic reads.
I love the look of those hardcovers and regret they were too hard for me to get hold of. However the omnibus editions that came out in the early1990's are a neat collection of tidy volumes with good reading order.
Off the top of head, the only other author that springs to mind atm that made me giggle is Douglas Adams, who wrote the well known Hitchhikers Guide series most of us read, and Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency (I read the omnibus edition).
To quote Bertie Wooster "Well knock me down with an F." who'd have thought that public transport and Wodehouse would be so intertwined. Douglas Adams is amazing.
Other than the obvious (Bertie and Jeeves!), I live for Madeline Bassett! She kills me!!!
Evelyn Waugh said that P.G. Wodehouse's idyllic world would never grow stale, and that he had created a world for people to live in and enjoy. Waugh said, "Mr. Wodehouse's idyllic world can never stale. He will continue to release future generations from captivity that may be more irksome than our own. He has made a world for us to live in and delight in".
Terry Pratchett reigns supreme for me.
I agree. I always look for narrations by Richard Briers. Bernie reincarnated.
100% Hugh Laurie does a splendid job acting Wooster, too.
I named my robot vacuum Jeeves. Bertie is a joy. I just finished Our Doris by Charles Heathcote and look forward to reading more Doris. Jane Smiley's Moo and Richard Russo's Straight Man were great send ups of Academia. Florida comedy writers, Hiassen, Barry and Dorsey. Yes, comedy is best when broad.
How splendid to have a Jeeves to hoover the homestead!😀 Also, that is a fine list of authors. Thanks for this.👍
Last year, I listened to many of the Blandings Castle Stories read by Stephen Fry. His Sebastian Beach voice is different from his Jeeves voice.
I also listened to the Winnie the Pooh books, both in narrative form and dramatized, having no idea Wodehouse and Milne had ever been friends. Stephen Fry did one of the voices on the dramatized version.
what is psmith in the city like to read? is it a good one to start with?
Hi Tristan! Is it alright if I make a request/suggestion for a future video? I was wondering if you could do one about some of the characters in War and peace and the personalities and flaws of each. Would you to see you go through some of them
Thanks for the suggestion Lauren. You picked a book with a lot of characters😂 I have yet to do any videos on characters, this is a super idea. Thank you so much.
Wooster seems to be the only novels in the first person and I wonder if he identified with the character.
Yes. I suppose PG Wodehouse and Jane Austen are my favourite authors. Of course you are right about Wodehouse’s brilliantly funny writing. Lord Emsworth is my favourite character. I try to emulate him as far as possible, though I lack the wealth and live in a semi-detached house in Leamington Spa rather than a castle in Shropshire, However, I admit that I don’t aspire to keeping a pig.
Did Richard Briers record all of the Jeeves & Wooster Stories before he died in 2013?
The book "You Suck" by Paulie Amigo is a fun self-help satire. Recommended.
Thank you everso much for this recommendation. I've never heard of it before but shall now have to sniff out a copy. Much appreciated.👍😀
I have not read anything of this author, and have rarely heard the name. I am going to have to change this haha
You really must give Woddehouse a go. He writes the English goofball better than anybody. He was insanely popular in America and Europe as he defined the English as the World prefers to imagine them.
ADORE WODEHOUSE! He is number one, followed by Terry Pratchett; although he is quite far down from Wodehouse.
Hey Tristan this is Jason from the U.S. on your instagram. I haven't read Wodehouse yet and was thinking of starting with The Code of the Woosters. Would that be an ok starting point?
Hiya Jason, great to hear from you. Code of the Woosters is amazing. but I would recommend The Mating Season first as the Code of the Woosters picks up from events in that book. So by all means start with those. I hope that you enjoy yourself.😀👍
Oh and I forgot as far as funny classics go I liked Three Men in a Boat by Jerome Jerome and Following the Equator by Mark Twain.
Have you read S.J. Pearlman? He is more in the Jewish American tradition.
Enjoyable video,what?
🤣🤣🤣