P. G. Wodehouse: Difference between revisions

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{{workcreator}}
[[File:wh_1.jpg|frame|What ho, Wodehouse!]]
 
 
Ineffectual gentry, cunning servants, horrendous aunts -- all these were contributed to the [[Genteel Interbellum Setting]] by '''Pelham Grenville Wodehouse''' ("Plum" to friends -- and the last name is prounounced "Woodhouse," not "[[Road House|Woad]][[Elmuh Fudd Syndwome|house]]") (1881-1975), a prolific writer of light comedies, who was also responsible for many early Broadway musicals.
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In 2008, a josei manga adaptation of the Jeeves novels, called ''Please, Jeeves'' and drawn by Bun Katsuta, began serialization in Hana to Yume's ''Melody''.
 
=== {{examples|Works by P. G. Wodehouse with their own trope pages include: ===}}
 
* ''[[Jeeves and Wooster (novel)|Jeeves and Wooster]]''
* ''[[Blandings Castle]]''
* ''[[Psmith]]''
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{{creatortropes}}
=== Other works by P. G. Wodehouse provide examples of: ===
* [[Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder]]: Many a wrong man and woman has proven fickle in absence, thus conveniently breaking up the engagement.
* [[After-Action Patchup]]: Offered in ''Summer Moonshine''.
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* [[Take That]]: After Wodehouse had been denounced by the orders of the Minister of Information, Alfred Duff Cooper, he was lambasted in the newspapers by his fellow-author, [[A. A. Milne|AA Milne]]. In ''The Mating Season'', written while Wodehouse was being held by the Germans, Gussie Fink-Nottle on being arrested gives his name as "Duff Cooper"; in the same novel, Bertie Wooster is sickened by the prospect of reading Milne's "Christopher Robin" poems publicly. Wodehouse returned to the attack in "Rodney Has A Relapse", in which reformed ''vers libre'' poet Rodney Spelvin writes [[Tastes Like Diabetes|smarmy]] poems about his toddler son, "Timothy Bobbin".
* [[A Tragedy of Impulsiveness]]: [[Playing with a Trope|Played with]] and ultimately [[Averted Trope|averted]] in ''Jill the Reckless''. Jill's impulsiveness is frowned upon by quite a few characters and even causes her fiancé to break off the engagement. {{spoiler|However, it turns out that the fiancé wasn't such a great guy anyway, and Jill's [[Second Love]] understands that her recklessness is one of her finest qualities}}.
* [[Trans -Atlantic Equivalent]]: Wodehouse and [[S. J. Perelman]] were frequently compared to each other.
* [[Unexpected Inheritance]]: ''Uneasy Money''.
* [[Unprovoked Pervert Payback]]: "A Sea of Troubles''.
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[[Category:P. G. Wodehouse]]
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