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  1. Jeeves and the feudal spirit totally is, and there's no need to read the series in order to understand anything, the plots are more or less the same : Bertie Wooster is an airhead, a nice airhead but an airhead anyway, he gets himself into all sorts of situations, can't find a solution, makes things worse, calls Jeeves (who knows everything about everything and is in possession of a brain) who ...

  2. Read 573 reviews from the world’s largest community for readers. The ingenius valet Jeeves aids Bertie Wooster in and out of various crises, including a st…

  3. Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit as it's meant to be heard, ... Offer ends February 21st, 2024 at 11.59PM ET. Buy for $12.79 Buy for $12.79 Confirm purchase ...

  4. Meanwhile Bertie has committed a more heinous offence by growing a moustache, and Jeeves strongly disapproves which is unfortunate, because Jeeves s feudal spirit is desperately needed. Bertie s Aunt Dahlia is trying to sell her magazine Milady s Boudoir to the Trotter Empire and still keep her amazing chef Anatole out of Lady Trotter s clutches.

    • Paperback
    • P.G. Wodehouse
  5. To cap it all, Bertie has incurred the disapproval of Jeeves by growing a moustach, thus alienating the only man who can save him from his trip to the altar. Throw in a disappearing pearl necklace, Aunt Dahlia's magazine Milady's Boudir, her cook Anatole, the Drones' dart match, and Mr and Mrs L. G. Trotter from Liverpool, and you have all the ingredients for a classic Wodehouse farce.

  6. Bertie Wooster is under attack. Jeeves disapproves of his new moustache and Stilton Cheesewright is threatening to tear him from limb to limb. Will Jeeves display the feudal spirit as crisis dawns?

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › JeevesJeeves - Wikipedia

    For example, in Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit (1954), when Bertie is surprised to hear that his Aunt Dahlia wants to sell her weekly paper, he remarks, "It was like hearing that Rodgers had decided to sell Hammerstein." (This is a reference to Rodgers and Hammerstein, who created popular Broadway musicals in the 1940s and 1950s.)