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  1. 1st Blandings Castle book. Something fresh would probably feel fresher if Wodehouse's stories didn't all blend together for me. I'm not complaining. Really. This is another excellent example of how witty escapism meets if it ain't broke don't fix it and they live Happily Ever After. Freddie and his father, Lord Emsworth, are up to their respective shenanigans.

  2. Where every prospect pleases and only Lady Constance and Scotch head-gardeners are vile. Mr Wodehouse's idyllic world can never stale. He will continue to release future generations from a captivity that may be more irksome than our own. For Wodehouse there has been no fall of Man; the gardens of Blandings Castle are the original gardens of ...

  3. Take the tour of Blandings castle. Interviews with the Cast of Blandings. Read the Cast Interviews; ... — The Crime Wave at Blandings. Duration: 1:15. The Portuguese Exotic Dancer ...

  4. Plot introduction. Although the main character is Psmith (here called Ronald Eustace rather than Rupert as in previous books, possibly to differentiate him from Rupert Baxter), the bulk of the story takes place at Blandings Castle and involves various intrigues within the extended family of Lord Emsworth, the absent-minded elderly Earl.. The plot is a typical Wodehouse romance, with Psmith ...

  5. Blandings Castle ist ein fiktiver Landsitz in den Erzählungen des britisch-amerikanischen Schriftstellers P. G. Wodehouse. Als Hauptwohnsitz des verschusselten Lord Emsworth in der englischen Grafschaft Shropshire spielt Blandings Castle in insgesamt elf Romanen und neun Kurzgeschichten, die P. G. Wodehouse zwischen 1915 und 1975 schrieb, eine Rolle.

  6. “[Blandings] is an entire world unto itself and, one senses, Wodehouse pours into it his deepest feelings for England.” —Stephen Fry. The final Uncle Fred novel marks his return to Blandings Castle to relieve Lord Emsworth’s woes: a nagging secretary, prankster Church Lads, and a plot to thieve his prize-winning sow.

  7. An absolute corker. Peak Wodehouse. Heavy Weather (1933) forms part of the Blandings Castle saga. It's the fourth full-length novel to be set there, after Something Fresh (1915), Leave It to Psmith (1923) and Summer Lightning (1929). Heavy Weather follows straight on from the events described in Summer Lightning. Whilst lacking any weep-with-laughter scenes, Heavy Weather is as beautifully ...