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- Newsgroups: alt.fan.wodehouse
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!howland.reston.ans.net!spool.mu.edu!news.nd.edu!bach!dwalton1
- From: dwalton1@bach.helios.nd.edu (david walton)
- Subject: Re: Thoughts on Wodehouse
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.000000.26062@news.nd.edu>
- Sender: news@news.nd.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: OUC, University of Notre Dame
- References: <AMATHUR.93Jan21120006@thunder.EEAP.CWRU.Edu>
- Distribution: alt
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 00:00:00 GMT
- Lines: 41
-
- Someone wrote:
-
- >But in spite of all this, I think that the majority of stories have similar
- >themes as well as similar characters. Maybe that is why I like them !
-
- After about the seventh-sixth story of the headstrong young woman who
- gets sent to Blandings because she loves a poor minister but is then
- rescued by Gally who introduces her lover to the Castle under the
- pretense that he's portrait artist Reginald Spaulding who's come to
- paint the Empress of Blandings, yes, the plots do begin to seem a bit
- similar. Ditto for most of the Mulliner and Bertie & Jeeves stories.
-
- One of the best Wodehouse purchases I made in recent years was The
- Pothunters (I think that's it), which is a collection of related short
- stories set in two English public schools. While many of them are
- still predictable, the characters and the plots make a refreshing
- change from the usual Wodehouse fare (which I admit I still enjoy
- tremendously). I think these stories are better than the other stuff
- chiefly because the plots aren't simply rehashed from earlier stories;
- the characters seem more real (!) because they're in situations that
- are both believable and different from what we've seen before.
-
- But then, analyzing Wodehouse in such tired, conventional terms as
- plot structure rather misses the point, I suppose. What I like most
- about Pelham Granville isn't his stories per se but the beautifully
- understated writing (but only a little bit :-), particularly the
- dialog (or lack thereof) of Jeeves.
-
- As for the series on PBS, while I like the character of Bertie, I'm
- disappointed by Jeeves (upper lip not stiff enough), Aunt Dahlia
- (neither large nor loud enough--she hunted with the Pitchley, after
- all!), Spode (too loud; needs to be more threatening with less
- shouting), and Gussie (not sufficiently out of it). Madeline Basset
- seems about right, as does Bingo Little. Aunt Agatha I've not yet
- seen.
-
-
- --
- { David Walton Mail to dwal@midway.uchicago.edu }
- { These opinions are all mine, and the University of Notre }
- { Dame has no right (and probably no desire) to claim 'em. }
-