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Wooster Proposes Jeeves Disposes or Le Mot Juste

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P. G. Wodehouses extraordinary career last from 1900 to his death in 1975. He wrote nearly a hundred books and innumerable short stories. His most popular works are those starring Bertie Wooster and his gentlemans personal gentleman Jeeves. They first appeared in a 1915 story and were last seen in Wodehouses final completed novel in 1975. Invariably Berties aunts pals and ex-fiances plunged him into the soup and Jeeves just as invariably retrieved him. How did Wodehouse stick to a few well-loved formulas and still manage to make his narratives perpetually fresh? Kristin Thompson is in a unique position to pursue this question. Since 1984 she has been the Archivist of the P. G. Wodehouse Estates archive. She has had unprecedented access to the manuscripts and correspondence of Wodehouse. Using this material she traces Wodehouses working methods. His seemingly effortless prose and stories were in fact the products of lengthy planning and revisions. Notes and drafts allow Thompson to reconstruct the stages through which a typical project passed. She also examines how he drew upon conventions of Victorian and Edwardian literature including the Sherlock Holmes stories to create humor. She goes on to trace the development of the two protagonists as Bertie goes from a drunken dimwit to a far more complex character and Jeeves develops from a clever servant to a nearly omniscient figure. Finally she analyses at length the series narrative technique and style. Should the work of a comic author be analyzed? Undoubtedly. Looking more closely at Wodehouses work reveals new levels of humor. Wodehouse once remarked "I like writing the Jeeves stories best " and it shows. "Wooster Proposes Jeeves Disposes by Kristin Thompson is a Christmas wish come true for the P. G. Wodehouse fanatic: a critical appreciation that treats Wodehouse as a serious literary craftsman-yet never gets stuffy." --Newsweek