P.G.Wosehouse
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P.G.Wosehouse
Anyone who loves humour, I request you to go and purchase a P.G.Wodehouse book immediately. He opens up a world where even the smallest act of an ant is view with a comic eye. You learn to look at all this in life with the same perspective.
Do try.
- The Apologist
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- DATo
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If you like Wodehose you MUST read Saki. Saki is known primarily for his numerous, comic short stories which are in the public domain and easy to find online. Here is a very short one which pretty much serves as an introduction to Saki if you have never read him before. I think you will like it. It is called, The Open Window and is probably one of Saki's most famous short stories ... served chilled, with a twist.
http://www.eastoftheweb.com/short-stori ... eWin.shtml
― Steven Wright
- The Apologist
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- asmaahsan
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I have a British sense of humor too and that gets me in trouble as i usually have to explain myself after cracking a subtle joke. My blasted sense of humor gets me in trouble all the time as only one out of hundred get my jokes, the rest get offended.
But this author can do no wrong in my eyes.
Jeeves.....what memories with that character!
Have you seen Fawlty towers? That's a series with my kind of humor.


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- asmaahsan
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True! As Rowling said, wit beyond measure, is man's greatest treasure. Wodehouse is one such gem!The Apologist wrote:I entirely agree! I have always loved British humor, so Wodehouse is nothing new for me. But he does have a topping ability to create characters that you never want to abandon. Jeeves and Psmith are classics of his literature. I find that after a hard days work the scintillating humor of one of these characters is "just what the doctor ordered."

- Maud Fitch
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I can't remember his name but his plummy tones deliver the Wodehouse dry wit perfectly. The book is "A Damsel In Distress" and ironically one of the main characters is named Maud, Lady Maud, no less

Hard to believe this novel was written (and made into a B&W silent movie) in 1919 and I'm listening to it on an electronic device, almost one hundred years later, with just as much enjoyment.
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That said, Wodehouse got away with it because his command of the English language was so extraordinary that, in best books, nearly every sentence was a perfectly constructed line that delivered its humor like Jeeves bringing a G&T on a silver plate. For sheer, unencumbered joy of reading, few authors come close to him.
- JosephPWinters
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- DATo
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Watch all five segments. It's a hoot!
― Steven Wright
- Rory_Jim
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I have just finished 'Lucky Jim' by Kingsley Amis, which is very funny (I highly recommend) - got me in the mood for some more humour!
- Mattsey
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I recently had a shocking experience in joining a book club where Wodehouse was universally disliked! Didn't know whether to faint or touch them like witches! They were an odd bunch I never met up with again. All they saw was the oppression of the working class and etc, not that I could see anything like that. I'm no scholar but nothing of his work seem to show anything of a political nature except the infamous black shorts and their root vegetable ideology.
They could not see how utterly wonderful he is. He is easily our greatest writer. He wrote a short story about accidentally burning a mans moustache! He's brilliant!
- LittleWilma
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-Stonewall Jackson