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Three Men in a Boat
The 100 Best Novels
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Week 25 - Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome
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Jenny wrote: "Do I dare to tell? I had never even heard of it before. ;)"
Really? It was one of the "classic read" in my family ever since I was a kid!
I have to admit though that I didn't like it that much: funny in bits but on the whole I think it is clear it wasn't meant as a novel at the beginning, but as a turistic guide!!!
I think it is a book that is easily quoted: some pages are really great, as the one on illness and hypochondria
Really? It was one of the "classic read" in my family ever since I was a kid!
I have to admit though that I didn't like it that much: funny in bits but on the whole I think it is clear it wasn't meant as a novel at the beginning, but as a turistic guide!!!
I think it is a book that is easily quoted: some pages are really great, as the one on illness and hypochondria

Books mentioned in this topic
Three Men in a Boat (other topics)Authors mentioned in this topic
Jerome K. Jerome (other topics)P.G. Wodehouse (other topics)
James Thurber (other topics)
Nick Hornby (other topics)
from the article:
"Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog), is one of the comic gems in the English language. An accidental one, too. "I did not intend to write a funny book, at first," said its author. (...) Ostensibly the tale of three city clerks on a boating trip, an account that sometimes masquerades, against its will, as a travel guide, Three Men in a Boat hovers somewhere between a shaggy-dog story and episodes of late-Victorian farce. (...)
Jerome's themes are airily inconsequential and supremely English – boats, fishing, the weather, the atrocities of English food and the vicissitudes of suburban life – perfectly pitched in a light comic prose whose influence can be detected later in the work of, among many, P.G. WodehouseP.G. Wodehouse, James Thurber, and Nick Hornby."
read the full article here