Inimitable Jeeves

Unabridged
Author: P.G. Wodehouse
Narrator: Frederick Davidson
Genres: Fiction, Comedy
Publisher: Blackstone Audiobooks
Date: May 2000
Length: 7 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD
  • WMA

Overview

A BBC Radio 4 Full- Cast dramatisation starring Michael Horden as Jeeves and Richard Briers as Wooster.

"Richard Briers and Michael Horden - sensational in the main roles." Time Out

Typical. Just when Bertie thinks that God's in his heaven and all's right with the world, things start to go wrong again...
There's young Bingo Little, who's in love for the umpteenth time and needs Bertie to put in a good word for him with his uncle. Aunt Agatha, who forces Bertie to get engaged to the formidable Honoria Glossop. And the troublesome twins, Claude and Eustace, whose antics when let loose in London know no bounds.

Add to that some friction in the Wooster home over a red cummerbund , purple socks and some snazzy Old Etonian spats, and poor Bertie's really in the soup...Only one man can save the day - the inimitable Jeeves.

Reviews (7)

The Inimitable Jeeves

Written by Daniel Lowenstein from Los Angeles, CA on May 29th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Wodehouse wrote a huge number of novels and several short story collections. This is in between. The book consists of numerous Jeeves incidents, some over several chapters, some contained within one. The stories are loosely connected. This book doesn't build the way the novels do, but it is delightful Wodehouse. Superbly read, as usual, by the late Frederick Davidson (also konwn as David Case).

Couldn't hold interest

Written by Nancy Murphy on December 11th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 2/5

Found that this couldn't hold my attention so therefore I really didn't digest the story and content.

Early Jeeves - excellant listen

Written by Intensely Green on September 27th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This book was written in 1923 so it is one of the earliest of the Wooster and Jeeves stories. Collection of stories really, which makes sense as the earliest W & J chronicles were short stories. This is a semi-cohesive collection of episodes. Later books retain a lot of this flavour but become more unified narratives. So this book is a good introduction to the oeuvre. This is an excellant book and if you like this the Wodehouse books that follow will just get better and better. By the way, several of the episodes and incidents in this book were adapted into the BBC Wooster and Jeeves series with Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry. Wodehouse (pronounced "wood-house") was a seminal influence on English comedic tradition. The Goons, Monty Python, Douglas Adams, Neil Gaiman, all admired Wodehouse and incorporated elements of his style into their own.

the Inimitable Jeeves

Written by Pepper Sue O'Neill on September 7th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

It started out slowly but it grew on me quickly. I enjoyed the English terms and humor very much.

Inimitable jeeves

Written by Anonymous from Plymouth, MA on November 3rd, 2005

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Silly silly silly! Oh those Brits! this kept me giggling. Ya gotta love their sense of humor!

Funny, but not that funny

Written by Anonymous on October 20th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 4/5

PG Wodehouse had been talked up to me as the funniest author since the invention of humor. Perhaps this is not his best book, or perhaps it just needs to grow on me. Which is not to say that I didn't enjoy it - but it's not funny in the sense that it will make you laugh out loud. But it was still very enjoyable.

Inimitable Jeeves

Written by Cathryn Smith on February 1st, 2005

  • Book Rating: 4/5

A classic. Why are the English so funny? This book had me laughing through my hour-long commute (rather than simmering in a semi-homicidal rage) and I became very, very fond of Bertie & Jeeves. Now I want to find all the rest of their adventures...

Author Details

Author Details

Wodehouse, P.G.

"Pelham Grenville Wodehouse was a prolific and extremely popular writer of humorous novels. Wodehouse was the son of a Hong Kong civil servant, who retired through ill health and returned to England, firstly to Dulwich and then to Hay's House, Stableford in Shropshire. Young P. G. Wodehouse, although educated away from home at boarding school returned to Stableford for his holidays and grew to know the district well between the ages of fourteen and twenty one (when the family moved again to Cheltenham). He retained a great affection for the county, particularly the area around Stableford, which is a few miles from Bridgnorth, and it was to become one of the major sources for composite settings in the novels, together with Gloucestershire, Worcestershire and Wiltshire.

Wodehouse's last, unfinished novel was Sunset at Blandings which Richard Usborne edited in 1978 after the author's death. Usborne followed up all references to Shropshire in the various Wodehouse novels, but especially this last one, and consulted contemporary railway timetables to see if fictional journeys could actually have been made. All this was in an effort to identify and locate the original of Blandings Castle. Usborne's conclusion was that it must be Buildwas, a mile or so up the Severn from Ironbridge.

However, since Usborne's conclusions were published N. T. P. Murphy has come up with a different theory in his fascinating book In Search of Blandings (1981). He concludes, having closely examined all the novels and visited dozens of locations, that Blandings Castle was situated at Weston Park on the Shropshire/Staffordshire border. He qualifies this though, by saying that the actual castle, in his opinion, is Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire, but that the setting of Blandings is based on Weston Park (most of which is in Staffordshire although a section of the park is in Shropshire). His arguments are certainly convincing as he takes us through the other possible locations, such as Morville and Aldenham Hall, and dismisses them. Murphy concedes that Aldenham Hall, with its famous iron gates, was very much in Wodehouse's mind when describing his fictional Matchingham Hall. In the Blandings novels there is much coming and going by train from Market Blandings and Murphy therefore suggests that the small town of Shifnal, on the main railway line from London, fits the bill perfectly.

Of course, the identification of fictional locations is always open to conjecture since writers so often use artistic licence, to say nothing of composite settings. There is little doubt that Wodehouse did know this corner of Shropshire well, so that his fictional Worbury is very likely based on Worfield, Eckleton on the real Ackleton and Bridgeford on Bridgnorth. And it must be more than coincidence that Wodehouse refers to a spot called Badgwick Dingle when a glance at the map shows us that, not far from Stableford, there is Badger Dingle.

Richard Usborne to some extent and N. T. P. Murphy especially, have apparently covered much of the ground in locating the Shropshire connections in the novels of P. G. Wodehouse. Perhaps future investigators of this perennially popular writer's books will come up with further locations and theories; already there seems to be plenty of scope for Wodehouse pilgrimages on the Shropshire/Staffordshire border."