Unknown
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The people involved in the creation of some books cannot be identified. So we call that “unknown.”
Bibliography
The Adventures of Sally (1922)
Sally Nicholas is a popular young woman who lives in a boarding house in New York and works as a taxi dancer. Upon reaching her twenty-first birthday, she inherits a considerable fortune. Sally tries to adjust to her new life, but financial and romantic problems beset her until a happy ending ensues. Read online at Hathitrust.
The Adventures of Sally (2012)
Sally Nicholas is a popular young woman who lives in a boarding house in New York and works as a taxi dancer. Upon reaching her twenty-first birthday, she inherits a considerable fortune. Sally tries to adjust to her new life, but financial and romantic problems beset her until a happy ending ensues.
Big Money (2007)
Two young men, Godfrey, Lord Biskerton “Biscuit” and his one-time inseparable comrade John Beresford “Berry” Conway, and their efforts to raise money and to woo their respective girlfriends.
Bill the Conqueror (1924)
In what is surely one of the Master’s most complex plots we meet Percy Pilbeam and George Pyke who will reappear in later Wodehouse adventures.
Read online at archive.org.
Bill the Conqueror (2008)
In what is surely one of the Master’s most complex plots we first meet Percy Pilbeam and George Pyke who will star in later Wodehouse adventures.
Brinkley Manor (1934)
Aunt Dahlia, Gussie Fink-Nottle, Madeline Bassett, Tuppy Glossop and Bertie and Jeeves -- what you might call a Wodehouse full house.
Buffalo Coat (1944)
Three doctors travel to Opportunity, Idaho in the 1890s, searching for success and fortune in a town where they find more tragedies than opportunities.
Read online at archive.org.
A Century of Humour (1935)
A collection of humorous pieces from the last (nineteenth) and early twentieth centuries.
Read online at archive.org.
E. F. Benson
G. K. Chesterton
Charles Dickens
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Stephen Leacock
E. V. Lucas
A. A. Milne
William Makepeace Thackeray
Oscar Wilde
P. G. Wodehouse
Et al
Chatterbox Hall (1884)
Stories and verses to accompany the pictures.
A City for Lincoln (1945)
The youth of Springfield rally behind a crusading basketball coach to clean up their town’s politics.
The Clicking of Cuthbert (1922)
A collection of golf stories told by the Oldest Member. Read online at gutenberg.org.
The Code of the Woosters (1938)
Bertie is commanded by his good aunt Dahlia to obtain, at all costs, including skulduggery, a silver cow creamer. At the same time he must guide the nuptials of Gussie Fink-Nottle and Madeline Bassett to a successful conclusion. Affairs are further complicated by Stiffy Byng, Stinker Pinker and assorted villains, including the infamous Spode. When all seems lost, Jeeves rides to the rescue.
The Coming of Bill (1920)
The story of Ruth and Kirk and their offspring Bill and how they overcame riches and a particularly poisonous busybody Aunt to find happiness. Read online at Archive.org. Or at Hathitrust.
Company for Henry (1967)
Jane’s Uncle Henry is possessed of an ancestral seat which he would be happy to be rid of and a certain seventeenth century French paperweight that his American cousin covets for his collection.
The Crime Wave at Blandings (1937)
Seven short stories from the Master, including the title story set at Lord Emsworth’s castle and one starring Bingo Little.
Daniel Boone (1931)
A brief biography of the pioneering backwoodsman.
Dead Ned (1938)
Condemned to hang for a murder he did not commit, Ned Mansell is revived by his physician friends and smuggled on to a ship bound for Africa.
Divots (1927)
Nine short stories about golf narrated by the Oldest Member.
Dorna or The Hillvale Affair (1929)
A summertime story and a mystery.
Eggs, Beans and Crumpets (1940)
A baker’s dozen of the Master’s best, including Ukridge and Bingo Little among others.
Read online at archive.org.