Psmith in the City
By P. G. Wodehouse
Jaunt with Psmith (the preliminary P is not sounded, “as in pshrimp”), one of P. G. Wodehouse’s most delightful creations, as he navigates alongside his good friend Mike Jackson through the hustle and bustle of the City and the world of high finance.
When his father suffers a sudden and significant financial loss, Mike (a sportsman to the bitter end) forgoes his Cambridge education and seeks gainful (if not meaningful) employment at the New Asiatic Bank of London. There Psmith joins him and, determined to see their futures settled, sets about charting a bright and beneficial course toward a happy state of affairs for one and all. Along the merry and madcap way, Psmith and Jackson push the Bank’s manager, J. Bickersdyke, to the brink of madness, mingle with socialists at Clapham Common, and find time for plenty of cricket, with Psmith dispensing pearls of his witty wisdom to one and all.
“Psmith’s work—well, it stood alone. You couldn’t compare it with anything. There are no degrees in perfection. Psmith’s work was perfect, and there was an end to it.”
Sir Pelham Grenville (P. G.) Wodehouse (1881–1975) was an English author and playwright and one of the premier humorists of the twentieth century. His inimitable prose, in the words of Evelyn Waugh, “has made a world for us to live in and delight in.” Wodehouse’s hundreds of written works include the masterful Jeeves & Wooster and Blandings Castle stories.
Paperback: 186pp.
ISBN: 978-1944418298