"A dashed awkward situation, if you know what I mean..."
Bertie Wooster is in a positively radiant mood—which, as any seasoned observer will tell you, is precisely when things begin to go wrong in earnest. Between Bingo Little's latest and most imprudent romantic upheaval and a certain alarming development in the matter of a mauve shirt, Bertie finds himself on the brink of a crisis of the first water.
In "Jeeves in the Springtime," the incomparable valet is already several moves ahead. While Bertie flounders and Bingo blunders, Jeeves is busy brewing the perfect tea and quietly steering events away from the sort of outcome that simply doesn't bear thinking about.
A sparkling example of Wodehouse at his finest: effortless, elegant, and irresistibly funny. The only sensible companion for a spring morning in Mayfair.
