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Cocktail Time
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'Cocktail Time' by P.G. Wodehouse


Another edition from the wonderful Everyman's Library imprint...
http://www.everymanslibrary.co.uk/wod...
All the covers are perfect and really enhance the reading experience. They're all designed by Andrzej Klimowski....
‘In these handsome volumes, with the pages that smell of real paper and those fine covers by Andrzej Klimowski, you find that the sparkle hasn’t dimmed. They are a cause for regular celebration.’
JAMES NAUGHTIE




I expect I am not the only one who finds this description, from Wikipedia, irresistible...
Frederick Altamont Cornwallis Twistleton, 5th Earl of Ickenham, commonly known as Uncle Fred, is a fictional character who appears in short stories and novels written by P. G. Wodehouse between 1935 and 1961. An energetic and mischievous old chap, his talent for trouble is the bane of his nephew Pongo Twistleton's life.
Even the names bring a smile to my face, especially Pongo Twistleton


I read the first few pages last night before turning the lights out. The splendid opening at The Drones left me with a glow of pleasure.
I was also inspired to look up "the poet Browning" who often gets referenced by PGW. It is of course Victorian favourite Robert Browning
If at this moment the poet Browning had come along and suggested to him that the lark was on the wing, the snail on the thorn, God in His heaven and all right with the world, he would have assented with a cheery 'You put it in a nutshell my dear fellow! How right you are!'
From Pippa Passes...
The year’s at the spring,
And day’s at the morn;
Morning’s at seven;
The hill-side’s dew-pearled;
The lark’s on the wing;
The snail’s on the thorn;
God’s in His heaven—
All’s right with the world!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pippa_P...


Also fun to have an older central character compared to Jeeves and Wooster, and I'm interested to see that the Drones Club features here too! Wonder if any minor characters featured in both J&W and Uncle Fred books?

I was out last night (watching Kraftwerk triv fans) and read a bit when I got in but I was so tired that I cannot really remember it, suffice to say that it was making me smile. Actually, no I do remember it, Uncle Fred is at Lords with Pongo after their lunch and so we get a bit more background about Beefy Bastable, who assumes some young hooligan from the Drones was responsible for the brazil nut displacing his topper. Classic stuff.
I've got a few leaflets to deliver this morning to encourage people to vote - but hoping I might carve out 20 or 30 mins early evening for more. And, I feel sure, I will be depressed by tomorrow's election result so what better than a bit of PGW's gentle humour to improve matters?

I must say, I'm thoroughly enjoying getting into an Uncle Fred story again. I was just saying the other day that sometimes I miss the uninhibitidness I had as a teenager and Uncle Fred definitely helps you "relive" that feeling. I was told that after you turn 60 you don't care what people think anymore and you become more uninhibited again. Could be fun!

Getting back to characters from other novels crossing over, I noticed a passing reference to Sir Roderick Glossop in Cocktail Time, who I recall getting mentioned in other PGW novels.
A quick Google revealed...
Sir Roderick Glossop is a recurring fictional character in the comic novels of P. G. Wodehouse.
Sometimes referred to as "the noted nerve specialist" or "the loony doctor", he is the most famous practitioner of psychiatry in Wodehouse's works, appearing in several Wooster-Jeeves stories and one Blandings story. Glossop represents one of the most fearsome authority-figures in the Wodehouse canon who is not an aunt. His character does not satirize any psychological fads in particular, but he manages to appear on the scene whenever one of Wodehouse's hapless heroes happens to be dressed or behaving in a way that might be construed to indicate insanity.
During the events of Uncle Fred in the Springtime, he is impersonated by Lord Ickenham, who borrows his identity to take lodgings in Blandings so as to resolve a series of complications. Sir Roderick, of course, suspects nothing.
More here....
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roderic...

I was amused by the catapult incident since I've recently read a couple of murder mysteries where a catapult was a deadly weapon - although I have to say it wasn't loaded with a Brazil nut!

....btw, Interestingly, here in the US a catault is called a slingshot!

Meanwhile, I'm now back reading this after a momentous 24 hours in the real world. I thought I'd be diving into 'Cocktail Time' to take my mind off the outcome of the General Election here in the UK, instead I found I could not possibly consider reading a book whilst such remarkable events were unfolding. We truly live in strange and unpredictable times eh?
Back to the book, I've now encountered the disreputable Oily. Fortunately Uncle Fred seems to have his measure. I did enjoy Oily's attempts to flog Fred the ruby ring.
I've made this comparison before, but reading PGW is like slipping into a warm bath: familiar, reassuring, very enjoyable, slightly decadent, predictable, and yet one of the nicest experiences there is.
#simplepleasures

Loved this description of Cosmo:
"Solomon in all his glory might have had a slight edge on Cosmo Wisdom, but it would have been a near thing."

So I was quite surprised to see that the book within the book has a cover featuring "a young man with a monocle in his right eye doing the rock 'n roll with a young woman in her step-ins."
Rock'n'roll is keeping firmly up to date with the 1950s publication date, even if the monocle isn't!
I've now read a little bit further and Uncle Fred starts reminiscing about the Home Guard during WW2 - so it would seem this is very much set in the 50s!


The references to the Marines are great - as are the occasional references to different poets
Uncle Fred gets so many great lines
I am on p172/244 and have just enjoyed the Swan scene which had me chuckling


I am almost finished now and have really enjoyed it so far
A quick question for the veteran Uncle Fred readers, are the other books as good as this one?
Interestingly two stories appear to be set at Blandings (so a bit more Wodehouse-ian crossover by the looks of it)...
The Uncle Fred stories comprise one short story and four novels, two of which are set at Blandings Castle:
"Uncle Fred Flits By" (1935) - included in the collection Young Men in Spats, (1936)
Uncle Fred in the Springtime (1939) - a Blandings story
Uncle Dynamite (1948)
Cocktail Time (1958)
Service with a Smile (1961) - a Blandings story
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uncle_F...


I especially like the sound of...

Utterly Uncle Fred
Frederick Altamont Cornwallis Twistleton, 5th Earl of Ickenham, better known as Uncle Fred, is back “to spread sweetness and light” wherever he goes . . . much to the dismay of his nephew Pongo. Whether disguised as an eminent nerve specialist helping the ailing upper class, an anesthesiologist ready to help clip a parrot’s claws, a major returned from an exploration of Brazil, or simply George Robinson of 14 Nasturtium Road, East Dulwich, Uncle Fred is always available to help people in need (even more so if a false identity is involved). Included are three novels—Cocktail Time, Uncle Dynamite, and Service With a Smile—and the short story “Uncle Fred Flits By.”


I now realise I have read one of the other Fred books - one set in Blandings, which is referenced in 'Cocktail Time' and when he goes to Blandings to pose as Sir Roderick Glossop (who I also mentioned above as a recurring character).
Some of those Blandings books are amongst my favourites I have read by PGW. One scene with Baxter still makes me chuckle when I think of it.

Click here to read my review
Thanks so much to everyone who has, is, and will, read and discuss 'Cocktail Time'.
It's been a joy reading your comments and observations. I hope there will be plenty more.
As I state in my review, I already eagerly await my next foray into the wonderful world of Wodehouse.
His books are the best possible escape from the real world - a retreat into a predictable, amusing, cheerful place where the lovelorn ultimately find solace and the pompous have their pomposity pricked.


- the PSmith books
- the Blandings series
- the Jeeves and Wooster series
- Uncle Fred
Which is not to denigrate Uncle Fred, who is also quite splendid, just an incomplete view based on around 20 or so Wodehouse books and added short stories.
What about the rest of my Wodehousian chums?










None of Wodehouse's protagonists ever really grow up, however old they get. Bertie Wooster, Uncle Fred, Lord Emsworth and even Psmith are essentially schoolboys who have managed to get over the nausea caused by their first cigar or taste of alcohol. I think that is why the attitudes to women are so juvenile; his young men are either scared of girls or go dotty over them, while adult women are also frightening and usually bossy, like boarding school matrons.
I imagine PGW read a lot of school stories when he was young and wanted to create a version for adults. He did not spend much time in the UK as a adult, so it is possible that his vision of the country remained that of a schoolboy, but I prefer to think he invented it.

From what little I know of PGW he very much inhabited his own internal world and was very distracted and distant when in the company of other people



And yes, a biography would be great.

Books mentioned in this topic
Cocktail Time (other topics)Utterly Uncle Fred (other topics)
Cocktail Time (other topics)
Cocktail Time (other topics)
Vile Bodies (other topics)
More...
Cocktail Time
by P.G. Wodehouse
An Uncle Fred novel
Frederick, Earl of Ickenham, remains young at heart. So it is for him the act of a moment to lean out of the Drones Club window with a catapult and ping the silk top-hat off his grumpy in-law, the distinguished barrister Sir Raymond Bastable - but unfortunately things don't end there.
The sprightly earl finds that his action has inspired a scandalous bestseller and a film script - but this is as nothing compared with the entangled fates of the couples that surround him. In this delightful novel by the master of comic fiction, Uncle Fred will discover that only he, with his fabled sweetness and light can save the day.