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- Newsgroups: alt.fan.wodehouse
- Path: sparky!uunet!microsoft!hexnut!frankm
- From: frankm@microsoft.com (Frank R.A.J. Maloney)
- Subject: Re: Jeeves and Wooster on Masterpiece Theatre
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.164843.19327@microsoft.com>
- Date: 28 Jan 93 16:48:43 GMT
- Organization: Microsoft Windows/DOS Users Ed Group
- References: <Jan21.062413.87684@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU> <karnik.727635170@myria> <1993Jan22.070802.27250@netcom.com>
- Distribution: na
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <1993Jan22.070802.27250@netcom.com> loki@netcom.com (James E Myers) writes:
- >karnik@cs.umn.edu (Neeran M. Karnik) writes:
- >
- >>BTW, any American fans of Wodehouse out there?? I was a little surprised to
- >>find that whenever I tried to bring up the subject of P.G.W. in American
- >>company, the response I got was, "Wodehouse? Never heard of him!".....
- >
- >Absolutely, we've even heard of him out here in California! (And considering
- >what he thought of Hollywood, wouldn't he be surprised by that?)
- >
-
- As these things are often reckoned in the lit-crit community, Wodehouse
- could qualify as an American author, don't you know. He came to New
- York in -- what? -- the Teens, had a successful career writing for the
- musical-comedy stage, had a long standing relationship with the
- Saturday Evening Post. I believe he lived most of his adult life in the
- States. In fact, it ought to be easy to argue that one of the reasons
- his depictions of upperclass English life are so timeless and mythic is
- that he was writing mostly from his own juvenile recollections and
- impressions. There are plenty of absurdities and anomalies that mark
- the writings and memories of a ex-pat too long gone, such as the
- California-like weather at Blandings (and at most of the country seats
- he creates for us).
-
- (Not that any author's "nationality" matters when appreciating his or
- her achievement, but I do find it at least ironic in this case, as in
- several others (such as whether T.S. Eliot was an American or British
- poet, whether the origins or the destination played the bigger role in
- shaping the writer and the works).)
-
- --
- Frank Richard Aloysius Jude Maloney
- "Well, I'm a little muddled." -- Glinda
-