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P.G. Wodehouse

A Life in Letters

P. G. Wodehouse Sophie Ratcliffe

$55

Paperback

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English
Arrow
02 September 2013
This is the definitive edition of P. G. Wodehouse's letters, edited with a commentary by Oxford academic Sophie Ratcliffe.

The funniest and most adored writer of the twentieth century, P. G. Wodehouse always shied away from the idea of a biography u a retiring sort of chap, he expressed himself through the written word. So his letters -expertly collected and edited here - provide the best biographical accompaniment you could wish for to legendary comic creations such as Jeeves, Wooster, Psmith and the Empress of Blandings.

Tapping hitherto unknown sources, these letters give an unrivalled insight into the great man, from his schooldays at Dulwich College, the family's financial reverses which saw his hopes of university dashed, life in New York working in musical comedy alongside Irving Berlin, Cole Porter and George Gershwin, the years of fame as a novelist, and not least the strange episode in 1940 where he was interned by the Germans and accused of broadcasting pro-Nazi propaganda.

It is a book every lover of Wodehouse will want to possess.

By:  
Edited by:  
Imprint:   Arrow
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 129mm,  Spine: 32mm
Weight:   461g
ISBN:   9780099514794
ISBN 10:   0099514796
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 0 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for P.G. Wodehouse: A Life in Letters

Wodehouse said letters make a wonderful oblique form for an autobiography, and Sophie Ratcliffe's expertly edited collection amply proves the point. * Spectator * Anybody requiring evidence of how much work PG Wodehouse put into his comic prose should read his letters. In her introduction to this definitive compendium of Wodehouse's correspondence, Sophie Ratcliffe warns that [the letters] display only on occasions the extraordinary stylistic elan that one finds in fiction. Indeed they do, although when the extraordinary elan bubbles briefly to the surface, it is worth waiting for. But Wodehouse was a dedicated craftsman. He wanted his published words to make people laugh, and he devoted hour after hour to making them fit that purpose. One suspects his personal epistles were often a happy relief from that discipline. * Scotland on Sunday * The great catastrophe of his life was of course, his broadcasting from Berlin in 1941, a slur on his reputation that never quite went goes away however often it is expunged. The whole saga is unravelled again here in Sophie Ratcliffe's excellent linking narrative. * Daily Mail * Filtered by some excellent editing, [these letters] are full of interest * Mail on Sunday * Sophie Ratcliffe has done an exemplary job in editing these letters * Sunday Telegraph *


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