-
Rupert Psmith (or
Ronald Eustace Psmith, as he is
called in the last of the four
books in
which he appears) is a
recurring fictional character in several...
-
Leave It to
Psmith is a
comic novel by
English author P. G. Wodehouse,
first published in the
United Kingdom on 30
November 1923 by
Herbert Jenkins, London...
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Wooster and his
sagacious valet, Jeeves; the
immaculate and
loquacious Psmith; Lord
Emsworth and the
Blandings Castle set; the
Oldest Member, with stories...
-
Psmith,
Journalist is a
novel by P. G. Wodehouse,
first released in the
United Kingdom as a
serial in The
Captain magazine between October 1909 and February...
-
Lambs in its
serialised version, was
released as
Enter Psmith in 1935 and then as Mike and
Psmith in 1953.
Although Mike was one of Wodehouse's earlier...
-
Psmith in the City is a
novel by P. G. Wodehouse,
first published on 23
September 1910 by Adam &
Charles Black, London. The
story was
originally released...
- McAllister)
leads to a
small wood with a
rough gamekeeper's cottage,
which Psmith made use of, not to
write poetry as he at
first claimed, but to
stash stolen...
-
include Bertie Wooster and his
valet Jeeves; the
immaculate and
loquacious Psmith; Lord
Emsworth and the
Blandings Castle set; the disaster-prone opportunist...
-
Wooster (Jeeves stories),
Pongo Twistleton (Uncle Fred stories),
Rupert Psmith (
Psmith stories), and
Freddie Threepwood (Blandings stories),
prominent recurring...
- Keeble's
stepdaughter Michael "Mike" Jackson, her husband, an old
friend of
Psmith James Schoonmaker, Lady Constance's
second husband, an
American millionaire...