August 25, 2005

Yet More Plum Blogging

Terry Teachout posted a nifty little factoid that caught my eye this morning:

• Fee paid by Cosmopolitan in 1932 for U.S. serial rights to Thank You, Jeeves, P.G. Wodehouse's first full-length Jeeves novel: $50,000

• The same amount in today's dollars, courtesy of Inflation Calculator: $607,551.90

(Source: Robert McCrum, Wodehouse: A Life)

I don't know much about the publishing world, but that seems to me to be a pretty good wodge of dosh.


And speaking of Wodehouse, I am currently galloping through an old favorite which I haven't read in a few years:

uncle fred.gif

Uncle Fred In The Springtime

This is (I believe) the first full length novel to feature the exploits of Frederick Altemont Cornwallis Twistelton, Fifth Earl of Ickenham, better known to the world as Uncle Fred. It is also a preeminant work in the Blandings Castle cycle, featuring generous helpings of all the usual cast, including Lord Emsworth, that preeminent porker the Empress of Blandings and the Efficient Baxter. Wodehouse wrote this book in 1939 at what I consider to have been the very peak of his powers, and it is an exquisitely balanced piece of hilarity, displaying Plum's true genious at fashioning insanely complicated plotlines in a manner that appears effortless, as well as his gift for extremely funny dialogue. (He wrote The Code of the Woosters - my favorite Bertie and Jeeves novel, round about the same time.)

Care for a sample? Here's the opening:

The door of the Drones Club swung open, and a young man in form-fitting tweeds came down the steps and started to walk westwards. An observant passer-by, scanning his face, would have fancied that he discerned on it a keen, tense look, like that of an African hunter stalking a hippopotamus. And he would have been right. Pongo Twistelton - for it was he - was on his way to try to touch Horace Pendlebury-Davenport for two hundred pounds.

Read the rest, as we like to say in the Blogsphere. You won't be disappointed.

Posted by Robert at August 25, 2005 09:10 AM | TrackBack
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