Having failed miserably while working for his uncle, Sam finds himself shipped off to America. He would much rather have been headed to Canada as he'd fallen in love with the picture of a women he'd... This description may be from another edition of this product.
The tension, and laughs, keep building until the very end. Another clever, good-natured, comedy from the incomparable P.G. Wodehouse.
Very Funny!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
One of Wodehouse's best. If you want to laugh out loud then this is the book for you!
Outrageously Funny
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
I am surprised that the Wodehouse fans out there haven't reviewed this book. According to me this is one of his best works - Sam the sudden has an adorable protagonist Sam , and a host of quirky characters "Hash" the cook/friend , Kay the heroine , "Soapy" and "Dolly" the partners in crime , the cook "Claire Lippet" . The book is set in the suburbs unlike the city or the country as in most of other Wodehouse books. I liked the characters and the dialogues much more than the plot twists. The book is full of outrageously funny situations, but a rather predictable twist at the end. All said and done this one is well worth a read - just to know what "Hash" has to say about love and about Kay's picture.
A Capital Alternative to "Pyke's Home Campanion"
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Probably best known for his Jeeves and Wooster books, P.G. Wodehouse was born in Surrey in 1881. His first book, "The Pothunters", was published in 1902 and he went on to write over 70 novels. He also wrote many short stories, with Jeeves making his first appearance in one of them. This book was first published in 1925 as "Sam the Sudden" in the UK, but as "Sam in the Suburbs" in the US. The book's hero is Sam Shotter, the nephew of the hugely successful businessman John B. Pynsent. Although from New York, Sam was educated at Wrykyn, in England. (Mike Jackson, Psmith's trusty sidekick, is another former pupil). However, as the book opens, he has been working for his uncle for three months and has succeeded in little more than kissing stenographers, organising high-kicking competitions and generally demoralising the workforce. As a result, Uncle John feels he has no option : Sam is to leave the Pynsent Import and Export Company immediately and take up a position at Lord Tilbury's Mammoth Publishing Company in London. (Lord Tilbury is currently holding negotiations with Sam's uncle and hopes to curry favor with him by 'helping' him with his troublesome nephew). Rather than travelling in luxury with Lord Tilbury on the Mauretania, however, Sam makes the trip to England on the Araminta, a tramp steamer. A close friend of Sam's, Hash Todhunter, is the steamer's pessimistic cook - someone whose company Sam finds a good deal more enjoyable than his future employer. When he finally arrives in London, Sam finds himself a little short on funds. This is largely due to Hash secretly emptying Sam's wallet to back a greyhound at the local dog-track. Luckily, Sam stumbles across Willoughby Braddock, another old Wrykynian. Braddock, despite staying as a guest with a former neighbour, is remarkably drunk and offers to put Sam up for the night. Sam had been on a fishing trip in Canada several months previously and had found a girl's photograph pinned on the wall of a hut he'd taken shelter in. He had, naturally, fallen in love with the girl in the photo. When he discovers the object of his desires, Kay Derrick, lives in the house he is spending the night in, he decides that nothing will stop him winning her heart. The first step in his plan involves renting the empty house next door. Unfortunately, three criminals - Soapy and Dolly Molloy and Chimp Twist - have their eyes on the same house. They believe the proceeds from a former colleagues heist has been hidden in Sam's new home - and they're not about to turn their backs on two million dollars. (They would, however, be quite happy to double-cross each other if it meant they didn't have to split it). Wodehouse is a very funny author and has a very distinctive style of writing. He isn't afraid to use outrageous twists of fate to make sure that if something can go wrong (or right, depending on your point of view), it will. This was one of the first books by Wodehouse I read, and it remains one of my favorites
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