Track | Section | Length |
01 | 01 Leave It To Jeeves | 42:53 |
02 | 02 Jeeves and the Unbidden Guest | 42:53 |
03 | 03 Jeeves and the Hard Boiled Egg | 42:03 |
04 | 04 Absent Treatment | 30:00 |
05 | 05 Helping Freddie | 31:39 |
06 | 06 Rallying Round Old George | 34:37 |
07 | 07 Doing Clarence a Bit of Good | 31:38 |
08 | 08 The Aunt and the Sluggard | 54:37 |
Notes
Running Time: 5 hours and 10 minutes
Read by: Mark Nelson
Book Coordinator: Mark Nelson
Meta Coordinator: Kristen Hughes
Artwork
Cover: Cover of My Man Jeeves. 1920 impression of the first (1919) edition.
Inset: P. G. Wodehouse c. 1904.
Recordings
These recordings were made using the author’s original published work, which is in the public domain. The readings were recorded by members and volunteers of Librivox.org, which has generously made the recordings available to the public domain. The audio files have been lightly edited and have been engineered using professional audio tools for maximum sonic quality. While Librivox condones the sale and distribution of these recordings, it is not associated with the management or operations of MP3 Audiobook Classics.
My Man Jeeves (1919) is the first in a series of sixteen immensely popular books by P. G. Wodehouse featuring the unflappable character of Reginald Jeeves, valet to the wealthy, idle, and often chuckle-headed British aristocrat Bertie Wooster. The volume contains four stories featuring Jeeves and four others. All are narrated by Bertie and take place in the world of the upper class in the years between the world wars in London gentlemen’s clubs, stately English country homes, and the café society of New York in the jazz age. Jeeves is the consummate manservant, a “gentleman’s personal gentleman”, in his own words, with a clear idea of proper dress and comportment, impeccable taste, encyclopedic knowledge of history, literature and the sciences, and a wealth of knowledge of the ways of the world coupled with a lively ingenuity. He serves as Bertie’s all-purpose guardian angel, finding ways to rescue Bertie from suffocating social situations, fashion gaffes, scrapes with the law, overbearing relatives, and problems in dealing with the fair sex, operating discreetly in the background until the inevitable revelations occur. The name Jeeves was borrowed from cricketer Percy Jeeves and the character is said to have been modeled on a butler named Eugene Robinson employed by Wodehouse as a researcher. The Jeeves canon consists of 11 novels and 35 short stories published over a span of 59 years. The character of Carson from Downton Abbey bears more than a passing resemblance to Jeeves, whose name can be found in the Oxford English Dictionary as a generic term for the quintessential nature of a butler or valet. It all started with this book.
Play sample:
Download a PDF datasheet
Item Info | |
EAN - DVD case | 0683422134999 |
EAN - CD jacket | 0683422134999 |
Media | MP3 CD |
Package | DVD Case |
Author | P. G. Wodehouse (1881 - 1975) |
Year | 1919 |
Recording | |
Read by | Mark Nelson |
Length | 5 hours and 10 minutes |
Type of Reading | Solo |
My Man Jeeves
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
- Product Code: DB-1178
- Availability: In Stock
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$9.99