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Jeeves and the Wedding Bells

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"Faulksie nails it again" in this pastiche novel featuring Jeeves and Bertie "evoking rather than imitating" Wodehouse "but doing so in perfect pitch" (Booklist, starred review).
 P.G. Wodehouse documented the lives of the inimitable Jeeves and Wooster for nearly sixty years, from their first appearance in the 1915 short story "Extricating Young Gus" to Wodehouse's final novel, Aunts Aren't Gentlemen, in 1974. These fictional single men were two of the greatest creations of a novelist widely proclaimed to be the finest comic English writer by critics and fans alike.  With the approval of the Wodehouse estate, acclaimed novelist Sebastian Faulks brings these two back to life for their legion of fans. 

Bertie, nursing a bit of heartbreak over the recent engagement of one Georgina Meadowes, agrees to "help" his old friend Peregrine "Woody" Beeching, whose own romance is foundering, which means an outing to the English countryside. Almost immediately, things go awry and the simple plan quickly becomes complicated. In a role reversal, Jeeves ends up impersonating one Lord Etringham, while Bertie pretends to be Jeeves' manservant —and this all happens under the same roof as the now affianced Ms. Meadowes. From there the plot becomes even more hilarious, in a brilliantly conceived, seamlessly written comic work worthy of the master himself.

"This Faulks certainly knows his stuff when it comes to homaging, let me tell you. Dashed if most of the time I didn't think I was reading the echt thing." —Christopher Buckley, New York Times Book Review"


"Entirely delightful. . . . if, like me, you are a Wodehouse addict, you will undoubtedly want to buy three copies for your friends' Christmas stocking"." —A. N. Wilson, Financial Times 

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 30, 2013
      Reviewed by Peter Cannon. In an author’s note included with the galley of this homage to P.G. Wodehouse (1881–1975), Sebastian Faulks asserts that he’s “no expert,” that he’s “just a fan,” with a modesty becoming Bertie Wooster. Despite such protests, the Wodehouse estate chose well in authorizing him to pen the first new Jeeves and Wooster novel since 1974’s Aunts Aren’t Gentlemen. In addition to concocting an intricate farce complete with fresh metaphors and literary allusions worthy of the master himself, Faulks has varied the standard Wodehouse formula in ways both subtle and daring.At the start, Bertie explains how he has wound up working downstairs at a country house in Dorset one weekend, while Jeeves masquerades as Lord Etringham among the upstairs crowd. Faulks may well have taken inspiration for this scenario from Julian MacLaren-Ross’s “Good Lord, Jeeves,” a brief parody admired by Wodehouse himself, in which Jeeves is elevated to the peerage and a destitute Bertie willingly agrees to enter his service. Where Wodehouse only hinted, Faulks refers explicitly to serious events of the period, like Britain’s 1926 general strike. In chapter one, a fellow member of London’s Drones Club says to Bertie en route to a stint on the Piccadilly Line, “Surely even you, Bertie, are aware that there’s been a General Strike?” When a character later asks Jeeves if he’s related to a noted cricket player of that name, Jeeves discreetly indicates that his distant relative perished at the Battle of the Somme. In fact, Wodehouse, a keen cricketer, derived the name for his gentleman’s gentleman from one Percy Jeeves, a cricketer who was killed in action in that epic slaughter. Who better than Faulks, the author of Birdsong, a harrowing novel set during the Great War, to drop a reminder of the horror of the trenches into Wodehouse’s innocent world? In the original novels and stories, Bertie refers only in passing to his accomplishments as a sportsman. In a key chapter in this pastiche, Bertie plays in a cricket match that may baffle Americans unfamiliar with the game but serves to show him as a lovable, well-meaning bungler. Georgiana Meadowes, a low-level employee of a London publisher who joins the house party in Dorset, appreciates this endearing side of him. Astute Wodehouse fans will sense early on that Georgiana is not the typical predatory female who sets her eye on Bertie. Indeed, their relationship takes an especially poignant turn after they both play roles in a scene from A Midsummer’s Night’s Dream as part of a village entertainment. As Faulks guides the reader through such familiar business as Jeeves disapproving of one of Bertie’s sartorial eccentricities (in this instance, growing sideburns) and organizing a betting syndicate among the house guests, he takes his story to a place that Wodehouse scrupulously avoided. The heartwarming denouement, which reveals how the godlike Jeeves has manipulated the action from behind the scenes, humanizes Bertie and Jeeves as Wodehouse never did. In my humble opinion, Faulks has outdone Wodehouse. (Nov.) Peter Cannon, PW’s senior reviews editor, is the author of Scream for Jeeves: A Parody.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from September 15, 2013
      Bertie Wooster and Jeeves, the feckless young master and his erudite gentleman's gentleman, creations of the great English humorist P.G. Wodehouse, are back, courtesy of his inspired fellow countryman and novelist Faulks (A Possible Life, 2012, etc.). This is the first Jeeves and Wooster novel in some 40 years. Faulks notes modestly that he has "tried to provide an echo" of the originals. He has done more than that. He has captured Bertie's voice, his innocent zest and his spirited banter with Jeeves to a fare-thee-well. This novel begins boldly with a role reversal--Bertie as servant waiting on Jeeves--but the real beginning is on the French Riviera, where Bertie meets a stunning beauty, Georgiana Meadowes. He's smitten, she's encouraging, but there's a problem. Orphaned early, Georgiana has been raised lovingly by her uncle, Sir Henry Hackwood, currently strapped for cash. To help him save the family home, Georgiana feels obliged to marry a fella with moola: Her fiance has been designated. Back in London, there's a further complication. Bertie's best friend Woody had been engaged to Sir Henry's daughter Amelia; a misunderstanding has caused the dear girl to break it off. Good egg that he is, Bertie sees his first order of business as reconciling Woody and Amelia. More misunderstandings ensue, resulting in Jeeves being mistaken for a peer of the realm by Sir Henry and invited to his home in deepest Dorset; to gain access to the premises, Bertie must willy-nilly become Jeeves' manservant and fraternize below stairs. The comic possibilities are legion, and Faulks exploits them all, with Bertie threatening to land in the proverbial soup at every turn. Meanwhile, Jeeves, always a fount of knowledge, proves himself also a master strategist of the mating game. Bertie, still in thrall to his former teacher's dictum ("Women are queer cattle"), needs nudging. A smackeroo on the lips from Georgiana during amateur theatricals does the trick. Faulks has risen to the challenge splendidly with this "homage" to Wodehouse. Jeeves and Wooster live again!

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2013

      What a combination! Faulks, author of absorbingly well-rendered best sellers like Charlotte Gray, as well as the James Bond sequel Devil May Care, here takes on one of his favorite authors with the permission of the estate. Yes, P.G. Wodehouse's debonair Bertie Wooster and redoubtable butler Jeeves are back, with Bertie downcast because Georgina Meadowes is marrying someone else. His promise to help friend Peregrine "Woody" Beeching with his own star-crossed romance leads to Jeeves's impersonating a lord and Bertie acting as manservant, all in the vicinity of the doubtless puzzled Georgina. Just announced; this ought to be laugh-out-loud funny.

      Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from October 1, 2013
      What, ho?! This blighter Faulks, after making a reasonably good show of posing as Ian Fleming (Devil May Care, 2009), has the unmitigated gall to take a run at impersonating the inimitable P. G., the very incarnation of sui generis? Doesn't he know that Wodehouseans far and wide, well born and less so, will be sharpening their incisors for the chance to take a chomp at the hindquarters of the cheeky upstart? But wait. Hold off, old sports. Young Faulksie just may have the gray matter to make a go of it. The first order of business when attempting to offer homage to Sir Pelham Grenville is to construct a plot as screwball crazy as anything Shakespeare ever concocted in the Forest of Arden (disguises, mistaken identities, catastrophic kerfuffles all de rigueur); next is to plop bumbling aristocrat Bertie Wooster in the middle of the muddle; and, finally, of course, it's necessary to set Bertie's unflappable manservant, the all-knowing Jeeves, to the herculean task of making it all work. Faulksie's plot is spot on: Bertie's pal, Peregrine Woody Beeching, has been dumped by his beloved, but Bertie is on the case. The plan, for reasons only a savvy Hegelian could fathom, involves Bertie posing as a manservant and Jeeves as his master. Brilliant stroke, that, allowing Jeeves to show his stuff at dinner-table chitchat and Bertie to, well, spill the gravy. Naturally, it all takes place at a country house (Wodehouse's Forest of Arden), and, equally naturally, Miss Georgiana Meadowes, who makes Bertie's heart go pitty-pat, is also in attendance. OK, fine, this P. G. poseur gets the plot right, but what about the all-important patter, the Bertie-isms and the priceless Bertie-Jeeves dialogue duets? But Faulksie nails it again, evoking rather than imitating, but doing so in perfect pitch. Finally, old-timers will doubtless recoil in horror at the shocking conclusion, but let's all loosen our stuffed shirts and let the new guy have his way. Top drawer. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Expect major media attention for the return of Bertie and Jeeves.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from October 15, 2013

      What ho, I see there's a new Jeeves and Wooster yarn on the shelves. Best fetch my glasses to read the small print. What's this, then? "An homage to P.G. Wodehouse by Sebastian Faulks." Isn't Faulks the bloke who wrote that World War I wheeze Birdshot, or was it Birdsong? Did that James Bond pastiche Devil May Care, as well? His new tale revolves around a girl, of course, but not of the Bond variety. In this instance, she's a chocolate-eyed beauty whose voice has the sound of a frisky brook cascading over the strings of a well-tuned harp. You know the effect. Georgiana Meadowes's father is having problems maintaining the old manse and, to gain funds, has betrothed her to another. To the rescue trots Bertie Wooster posing as Mr. Wilberforce, a gentleman's personal gentleman, in service to Jeeves, disguised as Lord Etringham. Many plans, as well as boobies, have to be hatched to keep this state of topsy-turviness afloat. All of them, according to Bertie, are foolproof. Of course, Jeeves is there to assure that they are so. VERDICT Let word go forth, from Mayfair to Herald Square, from Piccadilly to Kansas City: Jeeves and Wooster are back and in fine fettle. After sampling this tasty bonbon, Wodehouse fans and new readers will want to go back to the original series. [See Prepub Alert, 5/13/13.]--Bob Lunn, Kansas City, MO

      Copyright 2013 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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