Wonder Club world wonders pyramid logo
×

Reviews for School for Scandal

 School for Scandal magazine reviews

The average rating for School for Scandal based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-11-09 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 4 stars John W Powell III
I love P. G. Wodehouse so, so much. I have never read a Wodehouse novel ' and there are dozens upon dozens of those things ' and not been enchanted. His use of language, his humour, his sense of place and time; he brings to life a wholly fictional, but wholly delightful, vision of upper class, moneyed life in the early half of the twentieth century, and it is uniformly delightful, and invariably hilarious. But I had never read this first novel of his, a book written, apparently, for boys of a certain stamp, set in an English boarding school. In fact, though I vaguely knew that was how he had first begun his storied writing career, and I'd read Mike at Wrykyn and Mike and Psmith ' both set in public schools, and the latter of which being one of my favourite Wodehouses ' it had never occurred to me to search out these early works when I had so many other titles of his to find and devour. But several years ago, I decided I wanted to read all of Wodehouse's books in publication order, and so of course I immediately began to collect them, haunting vintage book shops and eBay and Etsy to collect the early titles I didn't yet own. (Yes, I know about ebooks. But I wanted to own them. Sue me.) But I never read them, not ' as is the usual story ' because there was just so much else to read, but because I think I was scared. What if I disliked these early attempts by one of my literary idols? Could I cope with the disappointment? I needn't have worried. True, there is a lot here that I had to figure out from context, the slang and assumed knowledge of the time being laid on pretty thick. But this tale of missing trophies from an unguarded school room, the descent of a detective to get to the bottom of the crime, and some stalwart fellows with motive and no alibi but too much honour to be guilty of such a crime, is very fun, occasionally very funny, and shows enough incipient genius that it is easy to see in this early Wodehouse the seeds of matchless wit that would come. For Wodehouse completists, for sure, but also for those who enjoy school stories and tales of pre-War Britain in all its feudal glory-which, of course, we egalitarians are happy to see gone, but somehow still miss.
Review # 2 was written on 2013-09-20 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Billy Blair Jr
When Douglas Adams calls you the greatest comic writer ever, that is pretty high praise in my book, and Adams' high opinion of P.G. Wodehouse led me to take the plunge and try his first novel. Wodehouse was truly prolific, writing nearly 100 books over the course of his seven decade career, but I decided to start from the beginning with his debut, The Pothunters, first published all the way back in 1902. This book is set at an English boarding school, and is categorized as one of Wodehouse's "school stories," but it doesn't seem quite sure what it wants to be. It is part YA mystery in the Hardy Boys vein, with the main plot revolving around some missing trophies that the students are trying to recover. But at times it drifts into becoming more of a sports story - it reminded me a lot of those baseball novels that American kids devoured in the 1920's, only featuring boxing and cricket instead. And at other times the story is more overtly comic. Wodehouse doesn't center the narrative around a single character, but jumps from boy to boy and scene to scene instead. It certainly feels like a debut novel. But it's a quick, breezy read, and at times it's truly funny. For instance, this discussion of an obnoxious teacher's pet made me laugh out loud (emphasis added): "'What sort of a chap is he? I hardly know him by sight, even.' 'Should describe him roughly,' said Dallas, 'as a hopeless, forsaken unspeakable worm.' 'Understates it considerably,' remarked Vaughan. 'His manners are patronizing, and his customs beastly.' 'He wears spectacles, and reads Herodotus in the original Greek for pleasure.'" Other times Wodehouse will be going on about life at public school or a description of some sporting event pretty matter-of-factly, and suddenly drop some one-liner that made me smile: "When one member of a public school falls out with another member, his politeness in dealing with him becomes so Chesterfieldian, that one cannot help being afraid that he will sustain a strain from which he will never recover." "What is life without a water-wagtail's egg? A mere mockery." "The most deadly error mortal man can make, with the exception of calling a school a college, is to call a college a school." "'It passes out of the realm of the merely impudent,' he said, with a happy recollection of a certain favourite author of his, 'and soars into the boundless empyrean of pure cheek.'" Good stuff. I hear that his later novels are much better, but even Wodehouse's earliest work makes for a pretty fun read. 3 stars, recommended.


Click here to write your own review.


Login

  |  

Complaints

  |  

Blog

  |  

Games

  |  

Digital Media

  |  

Souls

  |  

Obituary

  |  

Contact Us

  |  

FAQ

CAN'T FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR? CLICK HERE!!!