A Man of Means Pelham Grenville Wodehouse 9781542604871 Books
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The Episode of the Landlady's Daughter The Episode of the Financial Napoleon The Episode of the Theatrical Venture The Episode of the Live Weekly The Diverting Episode of the Exiled Monarch The Episode of the Hired Past
A Man of Means Pelham Grenville Wodehouse 9781542604871 Books
Bottom Line First:Six short comic misadventures forming a light read. A Man of Means is humorous rather than raucous. For a Wodehouse fan such as myself this is a collection completer of material often hard to find in paper copy. Mine is a Kindle copy. This may make for good bed time stories for the almost to early Harry Potter aged child. As an adult reader I enjoyed these stories but I know PG can do better.
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Wodehouse's six short tales of a traveling Innocent, Roland Bleke is our Man of Means. Having been co-written with C. H. Bovill and first published as a magazine serial 1914 they are from after the period Wodehouse would call his apprentice years. So neither exactly early Wodehouse, but neither is it from his prime.
There are several aspects that make these connected stories unusual. Unlike many of his earlier books the main character is a young man, not a school boy. There is nothing about boxing or cricket. Unlike many of his more famous stories Roland begins as a working man of few means and no connections. He will come into money and find that this is a mixed blessing. Across six brief stories, barely totaling 90 pages his money will get him into troubles including those he comes through while being oblivious. His several near ruinations often has efforts to skin him doubled back on the would be con artists.
He will meet a butler who will resemble Jeeves but with less loyalty towards his employers and social `betters' - having all of the smarts of Jeeves, much of the same cunning, but less interest in the well-being of his young man.
There is as is usual with Wodehouse little in the way of social commentary and no danger of there being any larger morals or didactic efforts. A Man of Means is all comedy and all inconsequential. Just as PG Wodehouse should be.
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A Man of Means Pelham Grenville Wodehouse 9781542604871 Books Reviews
I adore P.G. Wodehouse, so even though this isn't one of his all-time bests, it's still pretty darn good! The main character is a cipher (intentionally so "His chief characteristic was an intense ordinariness. He was a young man; and when you had said that of him you had said everything. There was nothing which you would have noticed about him, except the fact that there was nothing to notice.") with the most extraordinary luck. In each chapter, he finds himself embroiled in bizarre circumstances with a new colorful set of characters. So while it doesn't hit the heights of inspired lunacy like the Jeeves and Wooster novels, it's a fun diversion.
The title of this review refers to the main character finding himself in fortuitous circumstances out of his control. In fact Mr. Bleke considers plans to be a poison in his life. This "poison" is what sets the stage for some humorous ways to disengage himself from some rather fraut yet humorous situations. Rolland Bleke also finds himself infatuated with one lady after the other, which he mostly mistakes for true love until the bloom is off the rose.
We follow his life from his early working days as a clerk to "A Man of Means," in 6 interwoven stories first published in serialized format in 1916. For a turn of the 20th century novel, I found the writing to be quite conntemporary. P. J. Wodehouse (known mainly for Jeeves & the. Blandings Castle saga) wrote an easy to go down book, which I read it in one sitting on a lazy Saturday afternoon.
A genuine classic by P.G. Wodehouse guaranteed to amuse and astonish readers. First published in 1916, it is a story about a young man who had nothing about which you would notice except for the fact that there was nothing to notice. While looking for love in all the wrong places he unwittingly creates a fortune by continuing to take risks beyond the pale of common sense. You will love this series.
For almost forty years I have been a huge Wodehouse fan, and this one, A Man of Means, is a pretty good example of a very early Wodehouse. (It's six short stories, co-written with a C. H. Bovill; really more of a novelette, I think.) It's a prototype of early Bertie and Jeeves story. Roland Bleke, the hero, is a shy, diffident, lower middle-class version of Bertie Wooster. Roland is a chivalrous twit who manages to get himself out jams often by ironical good fortune. Mr Teal, the butler in A Man of Means, is a more cynical, conniving kind of Jeeves. Wodehouse's writing is funny and delightful, and the plotting (for a very early Wodehouse) quite deft.
P.G. Wodehouse's "A Man of Means" is a collection of six very short stories following the life of Roland Bleke. I found the first two stories to be very nice Roland is a nice guy who's bumbling around and ends up with people who try to take advantage of him. Without even knowing this is happening, he ends up ahead in the situation. "Nice" pretty much summarizes these. But, the remaining four stories follow a monotonically decreasing path. In each, Roland does things he shouldn't, gets involved with people who he shouldn't, and by happenstance, avoids the problems. In theory, it's the same plot-line of the first two stories. But, in these cases, it's not "nice." It's actually increasingly painful. Each story is less pleasant (more unpleasant, actually) than the previous one. So, all I can rate the book at is a Not Very Good 2 stars out of 5.
Great historical fiction with subtle humour. A great writer with a wonderful vocabulary and imagination. The adventures of the main character carry through six separate stories and reveal circumstances that aren't very different from what we experience today. The dress code is different as are many of the manners (I find it amusing that a woman was not supposed to reveal her given name to a man at that time in history -- about one hundred years ago -- even though she might spend considerable time with him having dinner or enjoying a boat ride, etc.) An unscrupulous stockbroker, a shy bachelor, a "painted lady of the theatre" comprise some of the characters in this whimsical set of stories. Surely to be enjoyed by readers who appreciate British humour and don't mind having their vocabulary expanded. Although much has changed since those times, much as stayed the same. Very enjoyable light-reading.
Bottom Line First
Six short comic misadventures forming a light read. A Man of Means is humorous rather than raucous. For a Wodehouse fan such as myself this is a collection completer of material often hard to find in paper copy. Mine is a copy. This may make for good bed time stories for the almost to early Harry Potter aged child. As an adult reader I enjoyed these stories but I know PG can do better.
;0
Wodehouse's six short tales of a traveling Innocent, Roland Bleke is our Man of Means. Having been co-written with C. H. Bovill and first published as a magazine serial 1914 they are from after the period Wodehouse would call his apprentice years. So neither exactly early Wodehouse, but neither is it from his prime.
There are several aspects that make these connected stories unusual. Unlike many of his earlier books the main character is a young man, not a school boy. There is nothing about boxing or cricket. Unlike many of his more famous stories Roland begins as a working man of few means and no connections. He will come into money and find that this is a mixed blessing. Across six brief stories, barely totaling 90 pages his money will get him into troubles including those he comes through while being oblivious. His several near ruinations often has efforts to skin him doubled back on the would be con artists.
He will meet a butler who will resemble Jeeves but with less loyalty towards his employers and social `betters' - having all of the smarts of Jeeves, much of the same cunning, but less interest in the well-being of his young man.
There is as is usual with Wodehouse little in the way of social commentary and no danger of there being any larger morals or didactic efforts. A Man of Means is all comedy and all inconsequential. Just as PG Wodehouse should be.
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