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I'd love to be able to give you everything you need to know about P.G. Wodehouse, including pictures, bibliography and everything else but other, brainier types have got in there ahead of me and done it better than I ever could. So, if you want to find out more about this god, try some of the following links:
First, there's the UK Wodehouse Society which has a whole menagerie of quizzes, clippings, and other delightful things.
Without a doubt my favourite Wodehouse site (apart from this one) would be Biblia Wodehousiana, Augustine Mulliner's site about Biblical references in the works of Plum. Wonderful stuff! Madame Eulalie's collection of Wodehouse rarities is also well worth a look!
Then there's the Wodehouse Logic Challenge, which is the best site ever by someone who once threatened to kick me in the ass or arse. Sadly, this site is now defunct, but you can still find its archives online at Weblywise.
Then there's the Wodehouse Newsgroup, of course (this is Google's service, which is doing the decent thing now, but if you prefer, you can access it via a decent newsreader package...or Outlook Express).
Click to listen to the voice of the man himself here saying things he'd later regret, or try this one for a BBC feature about Robert McCrum's new Wodehouse biography. The other day (and I'm writing this on the first of May 2003, by the way) there was a Radio4 special about Plum called 'The Wodehouse Notebooks'. At the moment, you can still hear the programme on the listen-again system but I'm not sure how long this will last, so get in there quick!
Complete Wodehouse e-texts (Not his best stuff) can be had at Project Gutenberg. Obviously, you can grab wodehouse books at any good online/offline bookshop, (just click on the picture in the top-left corner of this page, for example), but I'm especially fond of Audible at the moment because I like to listen to talking books while I roam the earth in search of little nibbly things, and I can download whole books from Audible in less time than it would take me to walk to W.H. Smith's. Then there's the Open Directory Project which has lots of useful gubbins too.
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