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Cocktail Time (Collector's Wodehouse) di P.…
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Cocktail Time (Collector's Wodehouse) (originale 1958; edizione 2004)

di P. G. Wodehouse (Autore)

Serie: Uncle Fred (book 3)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
8202126,714 (4.08)80
If Lord Ickenham had not succumbed to the temptation to dislodge the hat of Beefy Bastable, the irascible QC, with a well-aimed Brazil nut, the latter's famous legal mind might never have been stimulated to literature. But the incident provoked Beefy to write his exposé of the younger generation, a novel so shocking that it caused endless repercussions for its hapless author, and sparked off a whole series of outrageous misunderstandings that it would take the inventive talents of Lord Ickenham himself to resolve.… (altro)
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» Vedi le 80 citazioni

Enjoying a PGW fest with 4 books in a row. This is as humorous as the first. As always it’s as expertly narrated as the rest of the series is. ( )
  C.L.Barnett | Dec 8, 2023 |
This is another delightful offering from the pen, or at least typewriter of the comic genius that was P G Wodehouse.

First published in 1958, I don’t think that this would make it into the premier league of Wodehouse’s novels, such as [Right Ho, Jeeves], [Joy in the Morning] or [The Code of the Woosters], yet that still leaves considerable scope for it to entertain, which it does by the bucketful, or as Bertie Wooster might have said, ‘by the snootful’.

One of Wodehouse’s less well-known recurring characters is the Earl of Ickenham (also known as Uncle Fred), who is hewn from the same indomitable rock as the Honourable Galahad Threepwood, with a boundless capacity to strew mayhem wherever he might go. Now in advanced years, he is seldom allowed to venture into London unsupervised by his wife, the only person capable of reining in his mischievous tendencies. However, for as important an occasion as the annual Eton v Harrow match at Lord’s, normal regimes are relaxed. Up in the capital, with a spring in his step, Lord Ickenham starts the day in a sprightly way, demonstrating to the fellow members of the Drones Club, who have gathered for a pre-prandial nip, that he has not lost his boyhood skills, and with a catapult borrowed form the nephew of another member, fires a Brazil nut at the top hat of his stuffy old acquaintance Raymond Bastable.

This simple episode has significant and entirely unforeseen consequences, with Bastable, being goaded to demonstrate that he too had lived in Arcadia, writing the rollicking and sensational novel Cocktail Time, based on episode from his youth. However, although prepared to relate these episodes from his gilded youth, he remains sufficiently buttoned up (not least because he hopes to secure the Conservative candidacy for a safe parliamentary seat) to insist that they are published under a pseudonym. That is where the shenanigans begin.

While I feel that this does not quite match up to Wodehouse on mid-season form, it does display his characteristic effortless verbal dexterity, liberally spattered with scholarly allusions and quotations, and the blissful inanity of a sort of eternal Edwardian Corinthian spirit. This book bears no resemblance to any form or real life, and is all the better for it. ( )
1 vota Eyejaybee | Sep 11, 2023 |
I started reading this while I was in the middle of a Wodehouse biography, and my frustrations with that book chipped away at my enjoyment of this book. I'm returning it to the library, maybe I'll give it another try in the future.
  blueskygreentrees | Jul 30, 2023 |
This is the first Wodehouse novel I ever read. I still have the original 1959 paperback copy (Price: 40 cents) that I found at our house. This was probably in the late 60s. The paperback fell apart at this last reading and the last 20-some pages were read held individually. I later glued them back together, but who knows how long that will last. As back-up, I have the audiobook read by the late great character actor, Jonathan Cecil.
This is an Uncle Fred adventure where he juggles four romances and one caper, the latter being all his fault entirely. To the horror of his nephew Pongo Twistleton, the fifth Earl of Ickenham demonstrates his prowess with a catapult and a brazil nut, de-tophatting the stuffy barrister, Sir Raymond Bastable. It is the day of the Eton and Harrow match, so top hat targets abound. Uncle Fred's excuse is that this will make his old friend Bastable into a better person. Later when he runs into Bastable at the match, his airy banter causes the barrister to write a bishop-condemnable pot-boiler of a novel and the plot cheerfully descends into the sort of chaos only the Earl of Ickenham can cause and yet unravel.
Great characters, if mostly from central casting: rabbity middle-aged woman, eccentric elderly man, gormless young man, hard-boiled American crooks - the usual Wodehouse stock. But it's the way he does it, the language.
As for the audiobook, Cecil does a great job.
1 vota marfita | Jul 21, 2023 |
4.5* for this audiobook edition narrated by Jonathan Cecil

This 3rd book in the Uncle Fred series was hilarious! His nephew Pongo Twisleton having been married in the previous book, Lady Ickenham (Uncle Fred's wife) has no choice but to deposit him with his godson Johnny while she is elsewhere (she doesn't trust him on his own, for good reason!). Typical Wodehousian convolutions occur but one aspect of this that stood out for me is the fun Wodehouse has with authors, publishers and critics in this. Sir Raymond 'Beefy' Bastable, a neighbor of Johnny's, is prompted to "write his exposé of the younger generation, a novel so shocking that it caused endless repercussions for its hapless author, sparked off a whole series of outrageous misunderstandings, and required the inventive talents of Lord Ickenham himself to resolve." as the blurb puts it. I can easily imagine Wodehouse venting some of his own frustrations with writing & publishing in some of the comments. ( )
  leslie.98 | Jun 27, 2023 |
Here's that brand of airy frivolity again for the trials and tribulations of a sober barrister, Sir Raymond Bastable, when, irked by a taunt of Lord Ickenham, he turns out a book which turns into a best seller... A practiced hand for debonair merry-go-rounding, Wodehouse keeps his playful gentry on the boil and bubble with no trouble at all. For that silly moment.
aggiunto da SnootyBaronet | modificaKirkus
 

» Aggiungi altri autori (7 potenziali)

Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
P. G. Wodehouseautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Cecil, JonathanNarratoreautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato
IonicusImmagine di copertinaautore secondarioalcune edizioniconfermato
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The train of events leading up to the publication of the novel Cocktail Time, a volume which, priced at twelve shillings and sixpence, was destined to create considerably more than twelve and a half bobsworth of alarm and despondency in one quarter and another, was set in motion in the smoking-room of the Drones Club in the early afternoon of a Friday in July.
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Every man, they say, has one novel in him, and he had the advantage over most commencing authors of being in a state of seething fury. There is nothing like fury for stimulating the pen. Ask Dante. Ask Juvenal.
It has been well said that an author who expects results from a first novel is in a position similar to that of a man who drops a rose petal down the Grand Canyon of Arizona and listens for the echo.
Just as all American publishers hope that if they are good and lead upright lives, their books will be banned in Boston, so do all English publishers pray that theirs will be denounced from the pulpit by a bishop. Full statistics are not to hand, but it is estimated by competent judges that a good bishop, denouncing from the pulpit with the right organ note in his voice, can add between ten and fifteen thousand to the sales.
‘Well, well, well,’ he said heartily, ‘so there you are! I must have dropped off for a moment, I think. One is reminded of the experience of the late Abou ben Adhem, who, as you may recall, awoke one night from a deep dream of peace to find an angel at his bedside, writing in a book of gold. Must have given him a nasty start, I have always thought.’
The interest of Oily and his bride in Abou ben Adhem appeared to be slight.
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If Lord Ickenham had not succumbed to the temptation to dislodge the hat of Beefy Bastable, the irascible QC, with a well-aimed Brazil nut, the latter's famous legal mind might never have been stimulated to literature. But the incident provoked Beefy to write his exposé of the younger generation, a novel so shocking that it caused endless repercussions for its hapless author, and sparked off a whole series of outrageous misunderstandings that it would take the inventive talents of Lord Ickenham himself to resolve.

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