Money For Nothing
In this incisively insightful novel P. G. Wodehouse, as is his invariable custom, delves deep into the souls of his characters to lay bare many aspects of the human condition including the emotional, (âA snail crossed her path. She did not tread on it, for she had a kind heart, but she gave it a look. It was a look which, had it reached John, at whom it was really directed, would have scorched himâ), the intellectual, (âThose just-as-good imitation heads never pay in the long run. What you ought to do is sell yours for what itâll fetch and get a new one. And next time,â said Chimp, âmake it a prettier one.â) and the theological. (âOn that last awful day⊠do you know whatâll âappen? The Lord God Almighty will say, angry-like, âOoâs responsible for all these corpses I see laying around âere?â and Eâll look at you sort of sharp , and youâll have to rise up and say âIf Iâd of done as Sergeant Major Flannery repeatedly told meâŠthere wouldnât have been none of these poor murdered blokes.â â) This book introduces Hugo Carmody and Ronnie Fish, who later appeared in two Blandings Castle novels. Master criminals Dolly and Soapy Molloy and Chimp Twist make a return appearance in this story, after their debut in Sam In The Suburbs (Sam The Sudden in the UK). The action mainly takes place in and near the sleepy village of Rudge-in-the-Vale, with an interlude in London. (Summary by Zach Hoyt)
1/15Introducing A Young Man In Love
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