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  1. 10 de ago. de 2013 · Wodehouse himself, upon finding out that the title of perhaps his greatest Blandings novel, Summer Lightning, had already been taken by an American novelist, went on and called his novel Summer Lightning anyway, stating in his preface that he hoped his novel would one day be named among the 100 best books called Summer Lightning.

  2. An absolute corker. Peak Wodehouse. Heavy Weather (1933) forms part of the Blandings Castle saga. It's the fourth full-length novel to be set there, after Something Fresh (1915), Leave It to Psmith (1923) and Summer Lightning (1929).

  3. 1 de jan. de 2001 · 4.35. 3,333 ratings87 reviews. Blandings is now a major BBC One show starring Jennifer Saunders and Timothy Spall. In this wonderfully fat omnibus, which seems to span the dimensions of the Empress of Blandings herself (the fattest pig in Shropshire and surely all England), the whole world of Blandings Castle is spread out for our delectation ...

  4. 1 de set. de 2003 · Summer Lightning, first published in 1929, was the third book in P. G. Wodehouse's Blandings saga, and the first to deal exclusively with the assortment of aristocratic eccentrics and oddities, and their employees and hangers-on who inhabit or, as Lord Emsworth might put it, infest, the place.

    • Hardcover
    • P. G. Wodehouse
  5. Summer Lightning book. Read 473 reviews from the world's largest community for readers. The Honourable Galahad Threepwood has decided to write his memoir...

  6. 4 de jul. de 1996 · An omnibus edition containing three of the Blandings Castle novels: "Heavy Weather", "Something Fresh" and "Summer Lightning". The Empress of Blandings, the greatest pig in Christendom, is only the largest of the distinguished cast which includes Lord Emsworth and his terrifying sister, Constance.

    • P. G. Wodehouse
  7. P. G. Wodehouse is at his most delightful in this generational romp at Beautiful Blandings Castle, where Lord Emsworth is grieving, first, the dispossession of his beloved prize pig which was somehow stolen in at least four distinct acts of thievery and, second, the untimely return of his erstwhile secretary, the efficient Baxter, while the title's summer lightning strikes every youth in sight ...

    • P.G. Wodehouse