Jumat, 20 Mei 2011

The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse

The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse

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The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse

The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse



The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse

Free Ebook The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse

The story tells of how unscrupulous millionaire Benjamin Scobell decides to build a casino on the small Mediterranean island of Mervo, dragging in the unwitting heir to the throne to help. Little does he know that his stepdaughter Betty has a history with the young man John Maude, and his schemes lead to a rift between the newly-reunited pair.

The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #316685 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-06-10
  • Released on: 2015-06-10
  • Format: Kindle eBook
The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse

Review “To open almost any of Wodehouse’s books is to open a door into endless summer.” (Michael Dirda - The Wall Street Journal)“

Wodehouse's idyllic world can never stale. He will continue to release future generations from captivity that may be more irksome than our own.

” (Evelyn Waugh)“Handsome, affordable hardcover editions . . . Wodehouse is an anodyne to annoyances. He’s a tonic for those suffering from bearable but burdensome loads of boredom, from jadedness of outlook and dinginess of soul.” (The New Yorker)“Could a P. G. Wodehouse revival be more timely? Overlook Press, which is reissuing Wodehouse’s comic novels, clearly has its finger on America’s pulse. . . . With its sumptuously bound editions, Overlook Press has done the master proud.” (Los Angeles Times)“Wodehouse’s novels are the very definition of British humor―bubblingly witty and dryly loony. And as Overlook continues its reissue of these absurd souffles, you can buy the work for yourself in suave hardcover volumes, the dust jackets as natty as the prose.” (Entertainment Weekly)“The volumes of the Collector’s Wodehouse are fine indeed. . . . I am hard-pressed to think of a recent publishing project as ambitious and successful as this one.” (The Washington Post)

About the Author P. G. Wodehouse (1881–1975) spent much of his life in Southampton, New York, but was born in England and educated in Surrey. He became an American citizen in 1955. In a literary career spanning more than seventy years, he published more than ninety books and twenty film scripts, and collaborated on more than thirty plays and musical comedies.


The Prince and Betty, by P.G. Wodehouse

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Most helpful customer reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. great newspaper send up! By Robert McRobert Swine flu or the recession got you down? Are you pinned against the ropes? Have you got the blues? Melancholia got you in its grip? Worried that Obama may not be able to get your brother-in-law the job running US Steel and thus off your couch? .... Fear not! The cry goes out: P.G. Wodehouse to the rescue! There is nothing like a good Wodehouse read to cheer one up, not a pill, not a drink, not a men or women - just Wodehouse! Wodehouse is what the doctor ordered to tickle you in the funny bone and get a smile going on the old face.A pretty girl in a blue dress, relationship problems, newspaper farce and satire..... all and all a wonderful and fun read: The Prince and Betty! Highly recommended for those with a funny bone and a heart!If you love Monty Python, Faulty Towers, and other witty British Comedies, you'll love this great Wodehouse work. The writing, plot, wit, and word play is spot on. This is timeless stuff. And can I add terrific? This is laugh out loud funny. I adored every moment!

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Psmith the Psleuth By Gord Wilson One problem with POD and Kindle books that are reprints of out of print (OOP) books is that Amazon sticks them all together under the book title, so it's very difficult to write about how well a particular edition was edited or packaged. The POD books are probably all made through CreateSpace or the other company which owns all the other POD publishers and is, in turn, owned by Penguin, so that doesn't help. The paperback I read of The Prince and Betty says Pentleton House Publishing on the back, and of it here I can find no trace. If I did find it, with it's blue and green cover depicting a sort of impressionistic ocean view, I would note that, compared to many POD books, this edition was well-designed and edited, which made for enjoyable reading.The novel itself dates from 1912, and seems to be an enjoyable amalgam of two types of PGW books: one, a sort of musical comedy of star-crossed lovers in which someone turns out to be rich, or gets an inheritance, or is heir to the throne, so that all comes right in the end. In this case, it's that John is a prince, although that is known from the beginning and does not, in any sense, "save" the story by being revealed at the last. The other sort of writing is that of PGW, expatriate to New York, reading all he can about gangsters and the US crime waves so as to work these characters into his novels. In this book these two things co-exist.The musical comedy side will express itself in numerous variations in a handful of enjoyable one-off novels to come. But the darker side of the Muse will surface just three years later in Psmith Journalist The World of Psmith: "Psmith in the City", "Psmith Journalist", "Leave it to Psmith", with large chunks of this book grafted in and very few changes, except to drop the entire other plot. Instead of publishing a paper called Peaceful Moments, Smith, now Psmith, edits one called Cosy Moments. Instead of Prince John, he is helped by one Billy Windsor. The late departed owner of the paper, off for a healthful holiday, is not Renshaw but Wilberfloss. Battling boxer Kid Brady moves across intact, as does gang leader Bat Jarvis. The names of contributors to the paper, B. Henderson Asher and the Reverend Edwin T. Philpotts, Wodehouse must have felt were already too good to change. Pugsy Maloney, the office boy, also makes a curtain call.But it's even odder than that. Richard Usborne, in Plum Sauce Plum Sauce: A P. G. Wodehouse Companion, says that Psmith Journalist (which I always feel ought to have a comma after 'Psmith'), ran as a serial in 'The Captain' in 1909. Mike was published in 1909, which is one of the early cricket stories, in which feature Psmith and Mike Jackson. The first Psmith book, Psmith in the City, was published in 1910. Hold on, we're getting to the Wodehousian plot twist. Usborne says that Enter Psmith (1935) and Mike and Smith (1953) are virtually the same book, made from the second half of Mike (1909), which predates The Prince and Betty in 1912. So Psmith was turned into Smith and then back into Psmith over the course of four books. Penguin's editors must have noted the redundancy, for their The World of Psmith omnibus collects only three books: Psmith in the City; Psmith Journalist; and Leave it to Psmith. However, Joseph Connolly in P.G. Wodehouse in the Thames and Hudson Literary Lives series P. G. Wodehouse (Thames and Hudson Literary Lives Series), says that the English edition of The Prince and Betty was "utterly rewritten" from the American version, although they were both published in 1912."Money for jam!" Wodehouse used to say when he got an especially good name or turn of phrase, or when a bit of writing fell into place. There's enough of the green stuff in The Prince and Betty to provide a lifetime of jam, which it essentially did in priming the pump for the great outpouring of imagination yet to come. Lightning strikes twice when these bits slide effortlessly into the adventures of Psmith, Journalist in 1915, with ever so little editing so as to render them louder and funnier (readers are directed to these extremely decent guides by Usborne and Connolly, respectively, as aids in exploring and enjoying the wonderful works of Wodehouse.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Early Wodehouse, sweet and fun By Elisabeth "The Prince and Betty" may come as a bit of a revelation to those who know P.G. Wodehouse mainly through the escapades of Jeeves, Wooster & Co. It's unquestionably humor, but it's humor with heart. The romance is sweet, and the principal characters' subsequent brushes with difficulty and heartbreak are very genuine. Wodehouse was a master of the English language, and he could turn his gift with words to more serious purpose, too, when he wanted.The fact that this was originally two stories woven together can certainly be felt a little, in the way that character of Smith seems to take over the narrative at times, and how decisively Mervo and its inhabitants are left behind after the first section of the book for the streets of New York. But with P.G. Wodehouse as a guide, plenty of fun is guaranteed in any location. I particularly loved the scenes of the royal arrival and the "revolution" in Mervo. Wodehouse also seems to have a more natural touch with American characters than other British authors I've read. I've read a bit more of his early work besides "The Prince and Betty," too, and I certainly enjoyed the slightly different style enough to look forward to reading more of the same. Another nice find from the Legacy Vintage Collection, in an attractive and well-formatted ebook edition.

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