
It was one of those jolly, peaceful mornings that make a chappie wish he’d got a soul or something…
I picked up this P. G. Wodehouse collection, My Man Jeeves, which proved to be a series of stories from the early stages of the Wooster/Jeeves saga. I tend to forget that Bertie Wooster first appeared to readers as an Englishman residing in America. His saga begins with the story “Extricating Young Gussie,” which does not appear in this collection, and for good reason. “Extricating Young Gussie” features Bertie and Jeeves, but the author had not yet had the Great Brainstorm. In that story, Bertie’s last name is unclear, and all Jeeves does is answer the door and take people’s coats. It’s so jarring to the unsuspecting reader that some Wodehouse fans consider it non-canonical – though this collection belies that. In it, Bertie refers a couple times to the fact that his current residence in New York City is due to the fact that his Aunt Agatha had sent him there on the Gussie mission – and since he failed to complete it to her satisfaction, he’s waiting for the heat to die down so he can go home. (When he says, “What I mean is, much as I like America, I didn’t want to have England barred to me for the rest of my natural…” I thought sadly of Wodehouse’s actual exile after World War II.)
The book’s title is slightly misleading, as some of the stories are in fact not about Bertie and Jeeves, but about Reggie Pepper, a sort of proto-Bertie. Like the Bertie of “Extricating Young Gussie,” Reggie lacks the blessing of an omniscient valet (though there’s a valet with feet of clay in one story), so his problems tend to be solved by some kind of deus ex machina. Wodehouse, of course, uses dei ex machina in the majority of his non-Jeeves stories, because they’re a silly device and suited to the idiom.
If you watched the excellent BBC Jeeves and Wooster TV series with Hugh Laurie and Stephen Frye, many of these stories will be familiar to you – they based a whole season on them, I think, though the TV writers made some judicious alterations.
In short, My Man Jeeves is very funny and entertaining, as you doubtless knew from the outset. If you’re an admirer of Billy Sunday, you might resent a disguised reference to him (under the name of Jimmy Mundy) in the last story — but he’s an instrument of happy story resolution, so I don’t see why you should.






