The Coming of Bill

by P. G. (Pelham Grenville) Wodehouse, 1881-1975

Paperback, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

823.912

Tags

Publication

Public Domain Books (2004), Kindle Edition

Description

Classic Literature. Fiction. Humor (Fiction.) HTML: When you're in the mood for classic humor writing, nothing can hold a candle to the work of P.G. Wodehouse. This novel fallows the madcap adventures of a young family who have recently welcomed their first child. Any parent who has attempted to navigate the pitfalls of childrearing will appreciate this hilarious and all-too-accurate depiction..

User reviews

LibraryThing member abbottthomas
A sentimental tale, not what you expect from Wodehouse, but certainly written in his style. Set in New York City some years before the Wall Street crash it is the story of a pleasant young aspiring artist, Kirk Winfield. His independent means remove the need to work at his art and his generous
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nature provides him with an agreeable coterie of hangers on to keep him amused. An accident to his English manservant leads him to meet the alarming Mrs Lora Delane Porter, a writer and enthusiast for eugenics and physical fitness with a morbid fear of germs and very firm views on child-rearing. She sees in Kirk, despite his unsuitable occupation, a perfect physical match for her neice, Ruth, the highly eligible daughter of a millionaire financier. The couple meet and, fortunately for Mrs Porter's plans, instantly - in a rather typical Wodehouseian manner - recognise each other as soul mates. They marry, against Ruth's father's wishes, are cut off from any of his money and set up in a self-sufficient way in Kirk's studio where they soon have a child - Bill of the title.

When troubles come, they come not as single spies but in battallions. The stock that provides Kirk's adequate income crashes, he finds that his dilettante approach to painting has left him with little earning capacity and the solution offered by a pal is to leave his family and go to South America to mine gold. Things do not turn out well and when he returns he finds his wife changed by her inheritance of riches from her late father and his son being cared for in an aseptic white-tiled 'nursery' according to the precepts of Aunt Lora which include regular sponging of Bill and all contacts with a dilute solution of boric acid.

Things have to change to reach the expected happy ending and, with the help of Kirk's personal trainer and friend, Steve and a blind eye or two from butler Keggs they do. Steve is a typical Wodehouse character, a Lower East Side plug-ugly with a heart of gold and great common sense, as is Keggs, a stately figure above stairs but his own man below, particularlly after a glass or two of the amber nectar. Aunt Lora is cut from the same cloth as most other Wodehouse aunts and maintains her dignity to the end.

There are many other PGW books which will give more enjoyment than this but it is well crafted and not without humour.
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LibraryThing member Shimmin
A surprising Wodehouse that deviates heavily from the well-known mould of light romantic music-hall comedy, with a rather serious drama unfolding over several years and taking in failure, death and a much less jocular take on relationship breakdown that is usual.

Wodehouse touches on the long-term
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consequences of our influence on others, and casts an unusually critical eye at that monied and whimsical class of idler who so often decorate the pages of his books. Would such a character really be a comfortable husband? He allows the idler's flaws to manifest and have consequences that feel more genuinely corrosive and less farcical than usual, remaining at the same time sympathetic. The spontaneous matrimony common in other stories is also critically reviewed. That being said, the solution to their woes is typically simplistic and efficacious, and that jarred.

The touches of humour were still there and recognisable, and some characters felt familiar, but it felt a significant departure from his usual work. Had I known in advance I might not have picked it for a bus journey, and I probably won't re-read it, but I'm glad I have read it.
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LibraryThing member ianw
A very un-Wodehouse like story. Quite serious, with a death, a marital split, child abuse and similar things. Not at all the "musical comedy without the music" that Wodehouse described his work as. The inevitable happy ending is cliché-ridden. Not enjoyable.
LibraryThing member Figgles
A pleasant piece of Wodehouse - no Jeeves here, it's the love story between a rich young woman and a struggling artist and the complications caused by a meddling aunt and sudden wealth. The "Bill" of the title is their son and I was reminded very much of Nancy Mitford's (superior) work "The
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Blessing", although Bill is too young to be as manipulative as dear Sigi! Very enjoyable, light read.
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LibraryThing member leslie.98
While I enjoyed this early Wodehouse, it was more realistic satire than the zaniness I am used to in his more famous books! The tongue-in-cheek commentary about love versus money would make a great film I think (and Wodehouse did write some good Hollywood scripts).

While I own this Kindle book, I
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actually listened to it via the Librivox recording. I sampled both of the recordings of this novel that Librivox has, started off with version 2 and ended up switching to this recording (I guess you could call it version 1). Neither of them were top-notch but both were pretty good single narrator recordings. I just found that in version 2, the narrator had a habit of pausing that disconcerted me.
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LibraryThing member PhilSyphe
Having noted how the reviews for this work, along with the product synopsis, all stress that this is the closest P. G. Wodehouse came to writing a serious book, I suspected that this would be a weak offering. As it happens, it turned out to be one of the author’s strongest novels.

Yes, there are
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numerous scenes of a serious nature, but they succeeded in adding worth to the story. Humour is still very much in evidence, making this a well-plotted tale, featuring some quality characters. The author’s depiction of the little boy is funny and fantastic!
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LibraryThing member raizel
This book was originally published in 1920, before the stock market crash and the Lindbergh kidnapping; things become less humorous when they really happen. It is very different from all the other Wodehouse books I've read. As in another Wodehouse story, kidnapping a young child seems to be the
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perfect way to unite a couple, but, in this case, it is to re-unite them, not bring them together in the first place.

Two people who have fallen in love at first sight marry near the beginning of the story instead of at the end. The second half of the book centers around their baby, Bill. There are marital problems, characters with speaking parts actually die, a child is kidnapped, and more---including a failed expedition to find gold! I was reminded of some of the 1930s movies where the young man marries, only to discover that his wife is not what he thought she was; in these movies, however, he realizes that another woman, who has been a good friend all along, is his true soulmate and they live happily ever after. Aha! What's different about this book is that the two main characters change and grow!

There is a boxing coach who acts as an Elijah character: he recommends that the young couple marry before her father can forbid the marriage and is the mastermind behind the kidnapping scheme. The realization at the end that hard work is better than riches is rather like Candide's saying, we must cultivate our garden.
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LibraryThing member leslie.98
Maybe 3.5 stars. While I enjoyed this early Wodehouse, it was more realistic satire than the zaniness I am used to in his more famous books! The tongue-in-cheek commentary about love versus money would make a great film I think (and Wodehouse did write some good Hollywood scripts).

While I own this
Show More
Kindle book, I actually listened to it via the Librivox recording.
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LibraryThing member leslie.98
While I own this Kindle book, I actually listened to it via the Librivox recording. I sampled both of the recordings of this novel that Librivox has, started off with version 2 and ended up switching to this recording (I guess you could call it version 1). Neither of them were top-notch but both
Show More
were pretty good single narrator recordings. I just found that in version 2, the narrator had a habit of pausing that disconcerted me.

For comments about the plot, see my review of the Kindle book.
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Language

Original publication date

1920-07-01 (Herbert Jenkins, UK)

Physical description

236 p.; 8.43 inches

ISBN

1604500522 / 9781604500523
Page: 0.2171 seconds