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I ‰conquistatori di coppe by P. G.…
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I ‰conquistatori di coppe (original 1902; edition 1932)

by P. G. Wodehouse, Mario Benzi (Translator)

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2279119,796 (3.19)12
Classic Literature. Fiction. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:

Go back to the beginning with one of the masters of English humor writing. Wodehouse's first published novel, The Pothunters is also one of several of the author's works that centers on the fictional public school known as St. Austin's. The book recounts the daily comings and goings of the students, as well as their athletic triumphs and travails in their quest for glory and "pots" (trophies).

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Member:Cirpi
Title:I ‰conquistatori di coppe
Authors:P. G. Wodehouse
Other authors:Mario Benzi (Translator)
Info:Milano, Bietti, 1932
Collections:Letteratura, Wodehouse, Your library
Rating:****
Tags:None

Work Information

The Pothunters by P. G. Wodehouse (1902)

  1. 00
    Mike and Psmith by P. G. Wodehouse (MrsPlum)
    MrsPlum: In Mike and Psmith (previously serialised under different titles), Wodehouse perfects the School Story genre, which he began in The Pothunters.
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» See also 12 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
I probably could have given 4 stars, but this was rather similar to other Wodehouse school novels: The valuable sport trophies stolen, a student in need of money who is suspected... This school novel was actually Wodehouse's first, more a fix-up of long-ish stories, but clearly the author reused these ideas later.

As far as Wodehouse school stories go, it's a fine book but not the best. It's not a comedy, so don't expect that, but occasionally there are funny turns of phrase. Talbot Baines Reed and Wodehouse were probably the two best writers in this genre, and I enjoy both, but I can't help preferring Reed. Reed was clearly having fun, and it's rather contagious, and Wodehouse seems more contained, more neutral. He avoids Reed's occasional moralizing and melodrama, but it feels more distant. That is just compared to Reed, though. Wodehouse by all accounts loved his time at school and enjoyed writing about it. Perhaps he just had a more analytical way of looking at these characters, not as openly sympathetic. ( )
  jcm790 | May 26, 2024 |
Wodehouse's first book. It's not a humorous novel in the vein of much of his later work, but it does raise a smile here and there; it's easy to see how he was able to take the glib slang of his day and exaggerate it into the dry hysteria of the far more famous Bertie Wooster stories. He has an ear for the dialogue of upper-crust English people and how they talk around things, and that's apparent from the start.

The "plot" here is paper-thin, which is unsurprising. However, as other reviewers have pointed out, there are far too many (nearly identical) characters to follow clearly. He'll also be more skilled at balancing his prose later in his career. Here, there are long, long sections of nothing but dialogue, and a few others that are nothing but descriptions of sporting action.

It's really not a bad book at all, but it's extremely slight and obviously loses a lot of its intended appeal outside its original audience. ( )
  saroz | Mar 22, 2022 |
Very amuſiŋ comedic adventures of Engliſh public boardiŋ ſchool boys. ( )
  leandrod | Feb 10, 2015 |
School story featuring Tony Graham; Allen Thomson and his brother Jim Thomson; Welch, Morrison, MacArthur known as the Babe, Reade, Dallas, Vaughan, Plunkett, Charteris, Barrett, and others. A few brief appearances by Inspector Roberts, Scotland Yard. The first chapter is an introductory opening which details a boxing match between Tony and Allen; a fine stand-alone example of Wodehouse's storytelling of sporting events. The school's "pots" (trophies) have been stolen from the pavillion; Barrett finds them in a hollow trunk but can't tell anyone because he was "out of bounds" and trespassing on the grumpy Sir Alfred Venner's lands. Suspicion falls on Jim, especially from Mr. Thompson, master of the sixth form, who is doing a little amateur detecting and discovers that Jim is short of funds to pay a debt; but Inspector Roberts makes short work of Thompson's career in detection. Roberts discovers the culprit and the pots are restored while Jim is missing, having sprained his ankle coming back from a friend's house. A search eventually turns him up. He is still, however, short of funds, so Charteris organizes an all night work party to produce a special edition of the Glow Worm, a "strictly unofficial" monthly magazine, the proceeds of which retire Jim's debt. ( )
  charliesierra | Sep 17, 2014 |
One of P. G. Wodehouse's very early "school" stories -- the British genre set at what in the U.S. would be called "prep schools" (this is also the genre parodied by Rawlings' Hogwarts). They follow this tradition by focusing heavily on sports and boyish politics and regarding students who take studying series (like Plunkett in this story) with disdain. This story involves boxing (in the opening) foot races, and the theft of some sports trophies, so it has a mystery aspect. This was printed in 1972 when the older Wodehouse was approaching the end of his career, but was originally written in the early 1900s. ( )
  antiquary | Aug 23, 2014 |
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to Joan, Effie and Ernestine Bowes-Lyon
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"Where have I seen that face before?" said a voice.
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Being a miserable day boy he had had no experience of the inner life of a Boarding house, which is the real life of a public school.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Classic Literature. Fiction. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:

Go back to the beginning with one of the masters of English humor writing. Wodehouse's first published novel, The Pothunters is also one of several of the author's works that centers on the fictional public school known as St. Austin's. The book recounts the daily comings and goings of the students, as well as their athletic triumphs and travails in their quest for glory and "pots" (trophies).

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The first P.G. Wodehouse story published in book form, the Pothunters is the first of Wodehouses' highly regarded school stories.
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