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    <title>Fictionwise: Excellence in eBooks: Best-Selling Titles by P. G. Wodehouse</title>
    <link>http://www.Fictionwise.com</link>
    <description>Fictionwise.com: Best-Selling Titles By P. G. Wodehouse</description>
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<title>1) The Jeeves Omnibus: My Man Jeeves; Right Ho, Jeeves</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook23939.htm</link>
<description>Two Jeeves and Bertie novels for one low price. Here are the first two Jeeves novels, My Man Jeeves and Right Ho, Jeeves, complete and unabridged--over 800 pages of reading pleasure in one inexpensive eBook. You will howl, you'll laugh, your sides will need stitching, when you read the classic adventures that made a certain British butler a household word.</description>
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<title>2) The Psmith Omnibus: Mike &amp; Psmith; Psmith in the City; Psmith, Journalist</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook38330.htm</link>
<description>Meet Wooster and Jeeves' Only True Rival! Next to that famous pair, Rupert Psmith is P. G. Wodehouse' most beloved creation. This monocle-sporting dandy and ex-Etonian will tell you that the P in his name is silent, and was added by himself as he considers himself too remarkable to be a mere "Smith". You will meet Psmith in all his most famous adventures in this bargain omnibus reprinting of the three books that introduced this famous Wodehouse character to the world. When Mike introduces his new university chum, Psmith, to the gang, in "Mike and Psmith," Edwardian high-jinks are never higher. Climaxes with Wodehouse's greatest shambles of a cricket match. Next, in "Psmith in the City," our hero settles down to serious work in a bank (what could be more serious?), but soon has turned Britain's staid financial establishment upside-down. Finally, we learn what happens when Mike and our hero take off for the U.S. on a cricket tour. When he takes charge of a Big Apple magazine, "Psmith, Journalist" also takes on slum lords, gangsters, and society attorneys, and some of the drollest scenes the author ever penned. Written just before the creation of Wooster and Jeeves, the Psmith stories are Wodehouse at his best.</description>
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<title>3) The First P. G. Wodehouse Omnibus: The Indiscretions of Archie; The Intrusion of Jimmy; The Coming of Bill</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook39600.htm</link>
<description>A Triple-Scoop of Frolicsome, Rollicking Fun from the Creator of Jeeves and Wooster! Archie, who has the world's greatest gift for putting his oversized foot in his oversized mouth, indiscreetly sticks his nose in where he ought not, marrying the beauteous Lucille Brewster, whose millionaire father strongly disapproves. Then Archie develops his knack for getting in deeper and deeper with Father Brewster, with hilarious results. Next, Jimmy Pitt falls in love, befriends a burglar, and burgles a policeman's home; and that's only the beginning of this typically Wodehousian laugh riot that ends in Dreever Castle, amid a dizzying and dizzy cast of misunderstood lovers, detectives, imposters, criminals, and the obligatory scheming elderly aunts. When Kirk Winfield marries his true love Ruth, it seems like the fade-out in a typical Wodehouse farce, but the happy ending turns out anything but when Ruth's pain-in-the-seat Aunt Ruth, a know-it-all writer, decides to dispense marital advice, things go from great to worse, and more laughs follow. Don't miss this bargain collection of three Wodehouse classics at one low price.</description>
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