Wodehouse cracks me up discussion
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Where do you find substitutes for the Master?
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Dorothy Dunnet can be fun in her escapist crime / romance novels in the loosely knit Johnson Johnson series. Dolly and the Singing Bird is the first one.
For fans of Egyptology, there's another series by Elizabeth Peters featuring Amelia Peabody. Crocodile on the Sandbank is the first one.
I'm sure there's more to remember if I check back on my past years bookshelves.

(Thanks also to Cintia for the nod towards Lucky Jim. It's been much-loved for years. I'm new to the site and haven't had the tedious pleasure of adding all the books I've read to my profile yet. I probably never will.)
Is it posible to direct messages to people i.e. @Algernon ?
Anyhow, Bellwether seems like it might be a rib-tickler. Thanks, Algernon.


Incidentally, has anyone come across Thark, by Clive Francis and Ben Travers?
It's a hoot! A timelessly hilarious farce which stops sensibly short of Georges Feydeau, and at times evoking a soupçon of the Master himself.
It's a rarety and I was glad to see it's back again in print here:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Thark-Oberon...
I haven't recommended a book this fervently in some time.


Love that one. Nancy Mitford is always good for a laugh, too. Also A.A. Milne. Harder to find than his children's books, but his adult work was mostly light comedy.
Books mentioned in this topic
Cold Comfort Farm (other topics)Cold Comfort Farm (other topics)
Queen Lucia (other topics)
The Diary of a Provincial Lady (other topics)
We're Here, or the Adventures of Milford and Bailey (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
A.A. Milne (other topics)Nancy Mitford (other topics)
E.F. Benson (other topics)
Denis Mackail (other topics)
So, folks, where do you turn for books in this tradition?