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A tome of well-mannered high comedy, from the "unrivaled master of the comedy of manners" (Entertainment Weekly)
In Aunts Aren't Gentlemen Bertie Wooster withdraws to the village of Maiden Eggesford on doctor's orders to "sleep the sleep of the just and lead the quiet Martini-less life." Only the presence of the irrepressible Aunt Dahlia shatters the rustic peace. A classic-the last book written by Woodhouse featuring Bertie and Jeeves.
With each volume edited and reset and printed on Scottish cream-wove, acid-free paper, sewn and bound in cloth, Aunts Aren't Gentlemen and the rest of the Wodehouse novels published by the Overlook Press are elegant additions to any Wodehouse fan's library.
189 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1974




"I for one had been corn before his sickle, as the expression went."








It was a dilemma which might well have baffled a lesser man, but the whole point about the Woosters is that they are not lesser men.

"I found him in the private bar having a gin and ginger ale. His face, never much to write home about, was rendered even less of a feast for the eye by a dark scowl. His spirits were plainly at their lowest ebb, as so often happens when Sundered Heart A is feeling that the odds against his clicking with Sundered Heart B cannot be quoted at better than a hundred to eight." (70)Aunts Aren't Gentemen is the last book in the Jeeves and Wooster series, which I have now (sadly—but also with such joy) completed. I'll be moving on to Blandings Castle with considerable speed.