Tag Archive for: Wodehouse

Classics, by Barbara Kyle

 

 

Some
things are simply never out of date, right? Thank goodness. Here are a few classics I hold
dear.

 

Classic
Clothes
. I welcome autumn for the pleasure of pulling a smart, tried-and-true blazer out of the closet. And I’m always up for any chance to wear a little black dress; in this pic, it’s for my nephew’s lovely outdoor wedding.

 

Classic
Books
.
Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights and Thomas Hardy’s Tess of the
D’Urbervilles
are time-honored novels that I read as a teen and that influenced
me as a writer. 

Modern classics I revere are John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath, Ian McEwan’s Atonement, and anything by P.G. Wodehouse who has
more than once rescued me from blue days with his ineffable comic genius.


Classical
Music
.
The music of Bach and Mozart has enriched my life for decades, and because I play the violin my favorites works of theirs are any that feature that instrument. 

 

A modern
musical classic I adore is Leonard Bernstein’s exuberant and heartbreaking West Side
Story
. Violinist Joshua Bell shines in any genre, from Bach to Bernstein. Listen to him play
the West Side Story Suite. It’s twenty minutes of perfection.

 

 

 

Classic
Movies
.
I’ve watched Casablanca at least a dozen times and the story
never fails to thrill me and move me.

So does the 1951 version of A Christmas
Carol
starring Alastair Sim. My favorite bit in that fine old film is the small
role of Scrooge’s cockney housekeeper played with endearing spunk by Kathleen
Harrison. (She’s in the middle of the photo below.)

 


 


 

Classic
Cars
.
As a young woman, I considered the Jaguar XK-E the epitome of elegance. That
British sports car, manufactured between 1961 and 1975, is still widely admired as a true classic. 

 

I never did get an
“E-Type” but my husband and I recently bought a 2003 Miata and I love driving
it on a sunny day with the top down. My pal Ann drives a 2000 model. That’s us
in the photo with our Miatas (Ann on the left in purple, me on the right).

 

 I
don’t know if our Miatas are technically “classics” but I figure she and I – two
“old broads” – pretty much are!

 


____________________________________________________________________________


Barbara Kyle
is the author of the bestselling
Thornleigh Saga series of historical novels and of
acclaimed thrillers. Her latest novel of suspense is The Man from Spirit Creek. Over half a million
copies of her books have been sold.
Barbara has taught
hundreds of writers in her online Masterclasses and many have become
award-winning authors
.
Visit Barbara at https://www.barbarakyle.com/  

Literary Wonder Drug

by Barbara Kyle

I’m feeling pretty happy these days because I’ve just finished writing
a new book, my twelfth novel.

 

However, during the eighteen months it took to complete, there were days when
the work was definitely not making me happy.

 

Luckily, my career as a writer has taught me how to deal with those “blah”
days. I take a literary anti-depressant. Powerful, but safe and reliable, it’s a
true wonder drug.

 

My literary anti-depressant of choice is any book by P.G.
Wodehouse, the genius who created the ineffable valet Jeeves and his inane but
lovable employer, Bertie Wooster. Whenever I feel down, a hit of Wodehouse’s
writing gives me a warm, mellow high.

Besides being a genius of madcap storytelling, Wodehouse
invented some marvelous words. Three examples:

 

Gruntled. Adjective meaning “contented,” the
antonym to “disgruntled,” coined in The Code of the Woosters
(1938): “He spoke with a certain what-is-it in his voice, and I could see that,
if not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled.”

 

Persp. Short for “perspiration,” this first appeared
in The Inimitable Jeeves (1923): “The good old persp. was bedewing
my forehead by this time in a pretty lavish manner.”

 

Plobby. This describes the sound of a pig eating. It
appears in Blandings Castle (1935): “A sort of gulpy, gurgly,
plobby, squishy, wofflesome sound, like a thousand eager men drinking soup in a
foreign restaurant.”

 


Here’s the prescription for this literary wonder drug:

 

Dosage: One to three chapters every evening before bedtime.

Efficacy: 100%

Side effects: Tender abdomen from laughing; sore facial muscles from smiling;
stiff neck from shaking head repeatedly at the wonder of the author’s comic genius.

 

Contraindications: Do not take this drug if you
suffer from hard-heartedness or lack a sense of humor.

 

“Wodehouse’s world can never
stale. He will continue to release future generations from captivity that may
be more irksome than our own. He has made a world for us to live in and delight
in.”
– Evelyn Waugh.

 

 Jeeves Collection: My Man Jeeves, Right Ho, Jeeves, and the Inimitable Jeeves

 

 

How about you? On a “blah” day what’s your literary
anti-depressant?

 

_________________________________________________________________________

 

 


Barbara Kyle is the author of the bestselling
Thornleigh Saga series of historical novels and of
acclaimed thrillers. Her latest novel of suspense is The Man from Spirit Creek. Over half a million
copies of her books have been sold. Barbara has taught
hundreds of writers in her online Masterclasses and many have become
award-winning authors.
Visit Barbara at https://www.barbarakyle.com/