Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
PG Wodehouse doing what he does best., 28 May 2002
By A Customer
It is a debatable point as to which is Wodehouse's finest creation. Some say its Jeeves and Wooster, others, Blandings, and Mulliner, and so on. I am a huge Wodehouse fan, and I believe Psmith was a fine creation, by a budding novelist. With the Psmith stories, PG Wodehouse signalled the end of his school stories, and the beginning of his marvellous career as the finest English comic authour of the century, combining plot character, and language, so brilliantly. Psmith is a precursor to Jeeves. He is suave, sophisticated, and a socialist. This doesn't in any way dter the quality of the character. The P is silent in his name (like in Psocialism, or Psoccer) and some of the characters believe he speaks too much. Indeed, Mike Jackson even falls asleep while Psmith is talking, towards the end of this book. Psmith Journalist is the third Psmith novel. It continues where Psmith in the city left off, with Mike and Psmith in America, Mike playing cricket, and Psmith tagging along. With nothing much to do, Psmith begins his joyride by becoming the substitute editor of a formerly family oriented newspaper, called Cosy Moments. Along with his assistant, they turn it into a hard hitting journal, with quality journalism, and with it, its readership doubles. It is a fine novel to read, even if you are unaware of the character of Psmith. Indeed, this is a fine introduction into the world of Psmith, and more importantly, into the world of Wodehouse. this book, like all other Wodehouses deserves more than five stars. It is definitely worth the money.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
A bit annoying., 7 April 2009
Didn't really enjoy this. I found Psmith a bit annoying, him pre-fixing everyone's name with 'Comrade' began to grate after a while and the characterisation was a bit one-dimensional to say the least.
Still, it was an early effort from Wodehouse and the seeds of his greatness are there, (could 'Cosy Moments' be a forerunner to 'Wee Tots'!?).
Maybe that's the problem, his middle period books are so good that when one is below par, we notice it all the more!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Psmith's greatest adventure, 16 Jul 2004
Psmith is my favourite Wodehouse character, and this is his most exciting adventure. Here he is in New York, accompanying his friend Michael Jackson who is in the country on a cricket tour. Bored during his friend-s freqeunt absences, he finds himself a new interest, when he meets Billy Windsor, acting editor of a bland little family paper called 'Cosy Moments'. Billy has been left in charge while the real editor is away on holiday, and he and Psmith decide to liven the magazine up. They start championing the cause of anew young boxer, Kid Brady, and they also take on the somewhat more dangerous task of attacking conditions in a slum neighbourhood, bringing down the wrath of some very powerful people on their heads. Fortunately, Billy Windsor has been instrumental in returning a beloved pet cat to Bat jarvis, leader of one of New York's toughest gangs, and he is very grateful, so they have a powerful ally. But is he powerful enough to save them from their enemies? This is a very untypical Wodehouse, with a hard-edged plot that deals with serious matters. The villains in this book are real villains, not comic ones. But it is still wonderfuly funny, and Pmsith himself passes through the book like a modern-day Pimpernel, sauve, elegant and mocking, his languid, ironic manner hiding the man of steel underneath. There are some genuinely exciting scenes and hairsbreadth escapes in this book, making you wonder if wodehouse's style could have taken him in a different direction to write thrillers. This audio version is superbly read by Johnathan Cecil, who does a wonderful Psmith, and brings all the other characters to life too, I particularly like his Bat Jarvis and Kit Brady. This is an unusual but wonderful Wodehouse.
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