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The Routledge History of Literature in English
The Routledge History of Literature in English ‘Wide-ranging, very accessible . highly attentive to cultural and social change and, above all, to the changing history of the language. An expansive, generous and varied textbook of British literary history . addressed equally to the British and the foreign reader.’ MALCOLM BRADBURY, novelist and critic ‘The writing is lucid and eminently accessible while still allowing for a substantial degree of sophistication. The book wears its learning lightly, conveying a wealth of information without visible effort.’ HANS BERTENS, University of Utrecht This new guide to the main developments in the history of British and Irish literature uniquely charts some of the principal features of literary language development and highlights key language topics. Clearly structured and highly readable, it spans over a thousand years of literary history from AD 600 to the present day. It emphasises the growth of literary writing, its traditions, conventions and changing characteristics, and also includes literature from the margins, both geographical and cultural. Key features of the book are: • An up-to-date guide to the major periods of literature in English in Britain and Ireland • Extensive coverage of post-1945 literature • Language notes spanning AD 600 to the present • Extensive quotations from poetry, prose and drama • A timeline of important historical, political and cultural events • A foreword by novelist and critic Malcolm Bradbury RONALD CARTER is Professor of Modern English Language in the Department of English Studies at the University of Nottingham. He is editor of the Routledge Interface series in language and literary studies. JOHN MCRAE is Special Professor of Language in Literature Studies at the University of Nottingham and has been Visiting Professor and Lecturer in more than twenty countries. -
PDF EPUB} the Man with Two Left Feet and Other Stories (Jeeves 0.5) by P.G
Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} The Man with Two Left Feet and Other Stories (Jeeves 0.5) by P.G. Wodehouse The Man with Two Left Feet and Other Stories (Jeeves 0.5) by P.G. Wodehouse. There's divinity that shapes our ends. Consider the case of Henry Pitfield Rice, Detective. Or the case of Bertie Wooster, tottering and trickling to the rescue of his not precisely intellectual cousin, under the basilisk eye of Aunt Agatha. Or the East End mongrel who mixed in Society. Or the King of Coney Island, the Super- Fan, or, of course, Henry Wallace Mills, of the two left feet. Consider any or all of these twelve vintage cases of good eggs and decent chaps entangled in snares of young love. Bill the Bloodhound Extricating Young Gussie Wilton's Holiday The Mixer - I - He Meets a Shy Gentleman The Mixer - II - He Moves in Society Crowned Heads At Geisenheimer's The Making of Mac's One Touch of Nature Black for Luck The Romance of an Ugly Policeman A Sea of Troubles The Man with Two Left Feet. Thirteen early short stories, written in America. One, Extricating Young Gussie is important because it introduces Bertie (though his surname seems to be Mannering-Phipps), Jeeves and Aunt Agatha. Gussie Mannering-Phipps, head of the 'very old and aristocratic' family now that his father, Bertie's Uncle Cuthbert, keen drinker, unsuccessful gambler, big spender, has died, has gone to America and is involved with a girl on the New York vaudeville stage. Aunt Agatha sends Bertie over to extricate Gussie. -
Radiotimes-July1967.Pdf
msmm THE POST Up-to-the-Minute Comment IT is good to know that Twenty. Four Hours is to have regular viewing time. We shall know when to brew the coffee and to settle down, as with Panorama, to up-to- the-minute comment on current affairs. Both programmes do a magnifi- cent job of work, whisking us to all parts of the world and bringing to the studio, at what often seems like a moment's notice, speakers of all shades of opinion to be inter- viewed without fear or favour. A Memorable Occasion One admires the grasp which MANYthanks for the excellent and members of the team have of their timely relay of Die Frau ohne subjects, sombre or gay, and the Schatten from Covent Garden, and impartial, objective, and determined how strange it seems that this examination of controversial, and opera, which surely contains often delicate, matters: with always Strauss's s most glorious music. a glint of humour in the right should be performed there for the place, as with Cliff Michelmore's first time. urbane and pithy postscripts. Also, the clear synopsis by Alan A word of appreciation, too, for Jefferson helped to illuminate the the reporters who do uncomfort- beauty of the story and therefore able things in uncomfortable places the great beauty of the music. in the best tradition of news ser- An occasion to remember for a Whitstabl*. � vice.-J. Wesley Clark, long time. Clive Anderson, Aughton Park. Another Pet Hate Indian Music REFERRING to correspondence on THE Third Programme recital by the irritating bits of business in TV Subbulakshmi prompts me to write, plays, my pet hate is those typists with thanks, and congratulate the in offices and at home who never BBC on its superb broadcasts of use a backing sheet or take a car- Indian music, which I have been bon copy. -
Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Performing Flea by PG Wodehouse
Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Performing Flea by P.G. Wodehouse P. G. Wodehouse 1881—1975. P.G. Wodehouse was a comic writer who enjoyed enormous popular success during a career of more than seventy years and continues to be widely read. Despite the political and social upheavals that occurred during his life, much of which was spent in France and the United States, Wodehouse’s main canvas remained that of pre-war English upper-class society, reflecting his birth, education, and youthful writing career. An acknowledged master of English prose, Wodehouse has been admired both by contemporaries such as Hilaire Belloc, Evelyn Waugh and Rudyard Kipling and by modern writers such as Douglas Adams, Salman Rushdie, Zadie Smith and Terry Pratchett. Sean O’Casey famously called him “English literature’s performing flea”, a description that Wodehouse used as the title of a collection of his letters to a friend, Bill Townend. Best known today for the Jeeves and Blandings Castle novels and short stories, Wodehouse was also a playwright and lyricist who was part author and writer of 15 plays and of 250 lyrics for some 30 musical comedies. He worked with Cole Porter on the musical Anything Goes and frequently collaborated with Jerome Kern and Guy Bolton. He wrote the lyrics for the hit song “Bill” in Kern’s Show Boat, wrote the lyrics for the Gershwin - Romberg musical Rosalie, and collaborated with Rudolf Friml on a musical version of The Three Musketeers. (source: Wikipedia) Available eBooks. A Damsel in Distress (1919) A Damsel in Distress is an early novel from comic genius, P.G. -
Romance and Sex a La Wodehouse
Plum Lines The quarterly newsletter of The Wodehouse Society Vol. zi No. 4 W inter 2000 Lady Constance’s Lover: Romance and Sex a la Wodehouse By Elin Woodger A talk delivered at the Houston convention of the Wodehouse Society, October, 1999. Klin is, as all right-minded members know, president of our society, co-editor of Plum Lines, and an All-Around Indispensable. — OM nd now for the juicy stuff. Here is some advice from Look closely at some o f his early work, for example, and A Lord Uffenham for all you lovelorn men out there: you will find a lot of talk about affinities—the instant at traction of, as he described it, “soul-mates destined for Grab her! Seize her! Fold her in a close em each odaer from the beginning o f time.” No wonder so brace. A really close embrace. One that’ll make many characters in Wodehouse fall in love at first sight— her ribs creak. Kiss her, too, of course. Kiss her and you will usually find that it is the men doing the fall repeatedly. At the same time saying “You are my ing. The male of the species has only to take a single look, mate, dash it,” or something to that effect. That’ll and he knows, as in this example from Hot Water: do the trick. Walking before him, like a princess making The trick, of course, is for a Wodehouse hero to win her way through a mob of the proletariat, came a the woman of his dreams, a situation that we encounter girl. -
The Alan Ayckbourn and Andrew Lloyd Webber Musical Based on the Jeeves Stories by P.G
SPOTLIGHT ON THEATER NOTES PRODUCED BY THE PERFORMANCE PLUS™ PROGRAM, KENNEDY CENTER EDUCATION DEPARTMENT THE ALAN AYCKBOURN AND ANDREW LLOYD WEBBER MUSICAL BASED ON THE JEEVES STORIES BY P.G. WODEHOUSE logo designed by Dewynters plc., London TM © 1996 RUG Ltd. TM © 1996 RUG London plc., Dewynters designed by logo Y EEVES “The Fairy Tale World B J Jeevesorever joined and at the comic Bertie hip, Reginald Jeeves and Bertram Wilberforce Wooster are in the front rank of Fdroll characters invented in the 20th century. of P.G.odehouse Wodehouse” biographer Richard Jeeves is the perfect manservant. Bertie (“Bertram Voorhees* points out that BERTheTIE WOO STCharactersER TheTHE SCENE Story: A church hall, later to represent a London Wilberforce” is reserved for the rarest of occasions) is the WWodehouse’s fiction belongs “spiri- John Scherer flat and the house and grounds of Totleigh Towers. far-from-perfect master. Through the imagination of P.G. tually to the world of Victoria and Edward VII,” a THE TIME: This very evening. Wodehouse they have found a happy symbiosis, not unlike world “roughly limited on one side by the EEVES his manservant J , Eager to contribute to the festivities of a charity benefit that of naughty child and protective parent. Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria [1897] and Richard Kline performance in an English village hall, dim-but-affable Given Bertie’s propensity for foolish capers and his limited on the other by the introduction of the cross- Bertie Wooster bursts on stage strumming a frying pan. HONORIA GLOSSOP, his ex-fiance vocabulary, it is a bit difficult to understand how he managed word puzzle [1925].” To his confusion and chagrin, he realizes that the pan has Donna Lynne Champlin to graduate such prestigious institutions of learning as Eton been substituted for his stolen banjo. -
PG Wodehouse Archive
British Library: Western Manuscripts P.G. Wodehouse Archive (1894-2016) (Loan MS 129) Table of Contents P.G. Wodehouse Archive (1894–2016) Key Details........................................................................................................................................ 1 Arrangement..................................................................................................................................... 1 Provenance........................................................................................................................................ 2 Related Resources.............................................................................................................................. 2 Loan MS 129/1 P.G. Wodehouse Archive: Manuscript Material (1900–2004)........................................... 2 Loan MS 129/2 P.G. Wodehouse Archive: Wartime Material (1939–2015)............................................... 86 Loan MS 129/3 P.G. Wodehouse Archive: Theatrical and Cinematic Work (1905–2008)........................... 97 Loan MS 129/4 P.G. Wodehouse Archive: Correspondence (1899–2010)................................................ 111 Loan MS 129/5 P.G. Wodehouse Archive: Published Material (1899–2003)............................................. 187 Loan MS 129/6 P.G. Wodehouse Archive: Biographical Material (1894–2001)......................................... 210 Loan MS 129/7 P.G. Wodehouse Archive: Posthumous Material (1929–2016)......................................... 218 Loan MS 129/8 P.G. Wodehouse -
The Early Days of the Wodehouse Society by Len Lawson Past TWS President Len Lawson Gave This Presentation at the June 2009 Convention in St
The quarterly journal of The Wodehouse Society Volume 31 Number 1 Spring 2010 The Early Days of The Wodehouse Society by Len Lawson Past TWS President Len Lawson gave this presentation at the June 2009 convention in St. Paul. We’re grateful that Len has helped preserve this historical information and has shared it with us so entertainingly. he Wodehouse Society was founded by the gentleman you see Tpictured here, Captain William “Bill” W. Blood, USAF Retired. Not the best photo, but as you read in the caption, “The brilliance of his personality causes a lighting problem for photographers . .” The society was born with the meeting of Bill Blood and Franklin Axe (date unknown, probably 1979 or 1980). They met at an auction house (location unknown, probably near Doylestown, Pennsylvania) that often handled books. Frank’s wife Edna was looking for Wodehouse books for him when she ran into Bill Blood, also looking for Wodehouse books. Bill asked Edna to bring Frank along next time so they could talk about Wodehouse. She did and they did. Frank and Bill had a great time talking about Wodehouse. Bill asked if Frank would like to meet like this once a month, perhaps with more PGW devotees. Frank said, “Of course.” Somewhere along the way Bill suggested that they start a Wodehouse society, in fact, The Wodehouse Society. Since Bill agreed to do all the work, Frank said it was a great idea. Bill started by writing letters everywhere and placing a few advertisements. He wrote a letter to the editor of the New Hope Gazette, published a few miles from Bill Blood’s Doylestown in eastern Pennsylvania. -
Jeeves and Wooster of Yaxley, Etc
Letters from Plum See page 2 The Great PGW-Net Quiz Letters from Plum 1 8 A horse named Fink-Nottle 14 Jeeves Takes Charge again C o n ten ts The Night before Christmas 2 9 New Philly chapter? 15 A nautical Jeeves A few quick ones 4 9 The way it should be 15 TWS stationery New members 5 10 Bolton & Wodehouse & Kern 16 "Thank you, Joe Kerman" Want ads 5 11 Reminiscences of Galahad 16 6 Goodbye to "Jeeves and Wooster of Yaxley, etc. Right Ho, Jeeves on stage 17 Wooster" Something new 7 12 Proper sentencing 18 Newt news P. G. Wodehouse Book of Days 8 13 Christmas in New York 19 Quiz answers 14 Rebus 20 Plum Lines Vol 14 No 4 Winter 1993 1 Letters from Plum which was the first thing to bring him to the notice of American editors." He was still using the nickname four years later. The letter on page one was written by P. G. Bradshaw was also Plum's ad hoc literary Wodehouse to his friend Bradshaw on agent for a few years and they remained October 1,1914. It is one of several early friends at least into the 1930s. (I swiped Wodehouse letters owned by Ronald Levine, everything in this paragraph from Barry a TWS member in Johannesburg, South Phelps's P. G. Wodehouse: Man and Myth.) Africa. Ronald kindly sent me copies of the letters so that they could be published in Plum Lines and give us some insight into Plum's early life—they are the raw material of literary history. -
Sauce Template
Number 74 June 2015 The Everyman Wodehouse Uniform Edition: Celebration of the Project Completion by Robert Bruce Most members will be aware that Everyman recently completed their Everyman Wodehouse uniform edition project. A celebration to mark this event was held on 20 April 2015 at The Goring Hotel in London. The venue was appropriate, The Goring having been the favourite hotel of that well-known Wodehouse fan, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother. The involvement of Bollinger – sponsors of the Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize for comic literature (the 2015 winner of which is Alexander McCall Smith) – was much in evidence at the event. lasses were raised. The sound of corks popping from magnums of Bollinger was heard. And, at tGhe urging of David Campbell, the publisher of Everyman’s Library, we toasted the completion of the Everyman Wodehouse. Cover illustrator Andrzej Klimowski with his Everyman books (and glass of Bollinger champagne). A packed throng of literary and Wodehouse types had gathered in The Goring Hotel, a mere cricket ball (Photo copyright Graham Fidger) throw from the back garden of Buckingham Palace, to Campbell was celebrating not just the completion celebrate the fact that for the first time a full of the 16-year task but the fact that, since the hardback edition, 99 books strong, was available. emergence of the first books in the edition, Everyman has sold over half a million copies worldwide. He was in fine form, reminding everyone of his favourite Wodehouse nuggets. “It was one of those still evenings you get in the summer, when you can hear a snail clear its throat a mile away,” he reminded us. -
Psmith in Pseattle
The quarterly journal of The Wodehouse Society Volume 36 Number 4 Winter 2015 Psmith in Pseattle: The 2015 TWS Convention ll the dreams and schemes came to fruition as A a throng of cheery Wodehouseans descended on Seattle for the biennial convention of The Wodehouse Society. Well-sluiced members toasted Plum, friends both present and absent, and the drizzly city. The convention was officially held October 30–November 1, but many conventioneers arrived early and/or left late, taking in the sights, sounds, and shenanigans of that fine northwestern town. As with other recent conventions, we’re printing here a collector’s edition of Plum Lines, replete with four pages of convention photographs. We were very fortunate to hear some top-shelf papers delivered at this convention (most of which will be published within the next year in this journal), the performances par excellence, and plans for the 2017 convention. You’ll read tales of bonhomie and boisterousness, culture “Come sluice with us!” Leah Fleming raises a toast at and conviviality. And you can experience (or relive) the The Wodehouse Society convention in Seattle. charms of our good-humored conventions. Read on, (photo by Elin Woodger) Wodehouseans, read on! for a three-hour cruise. A ferry, of course, is a boat loaded with cars, bikes, and people crossing a body of water. Been there, done that, you say? Ah, but what A Frizzled Ferry and about with a boatload of Wodehousians crossing Elliott Bay? In our opinion, it is definitely on the high end of a Refreshing Rail ferry experiences for good company and conversation. -
A Potted Biography of P G Wodehouse, with Milestones
The P G Wodehouse Society (UK) Information Sheet Number 8 Revised October 2019 A Potted Biography of P G Wodehouse, with Milestones Date Event 1877 February 3 Marriage of Plum’s parents, Eleanor (née Deane) and Henry Ernest 1877 September 26 Birth of his eldest brother Philip Peveril 1879 May 11 Birth of his second older brother Ernest Armine 1881 October 15 Birth of Pelham Grenville Wodehouse at 1 Vale Place, Guildford, Surrey 1885 May 23 Birth of Ethel Newton, the future Lady Wodehouse, in Kings Lynn, Norfolk 1886 PGW attended Dame School in Croydon, Surrey 1889 PGW was transferred to Elizabeth College, in Guernsey 1891 PGW moved to Malvern House, a preparatory school in Kearsney, Kent 1892 May 30 Birth of his younger brother Richard Lancelot Deane 1894 to 1900 PGW attended Dulwich College 1900 Received his first payment for writing: from Public School Magazine for an article entitled Some Aspects of Game-Captaincy 1900 September Started work at the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, London and took rooms in Markham Square, Chelsea 1901 June Caught mumps 1901 July First real short story published in Public School Magazine, entitled The Prize Poem 1901 August 16 First contribution to Globe newspaper 1902 September 9 Resigned from the Bank 1902 September 17 First article for Punch, entitled An Unfinished Collection 1902 September 19 First book published, The Pothunters 1902 Moved to Walpole Street, Chelsea 1903 Stayed at Emsworth House School, Hampshire 1903 August Joined the By the Way column of The Globe on a permanent basis 1904 April 16