
Intrusion of Jimmy
P.G. Wodehouse's sparkling farce opens with playboy Jimmy Pitt, recently jilted and bored in New York, making a foolish bet that propels him into a police captain's house in the dead of night. What begins as metropolitan mischief spirals spectacularly when Jimmy follows his heart across the Atlantic to Dreever Castle in England, where the objects of his affection have retreated. There, chaos erupts in classic Wodehouse fashion: imposters multiply, a detective shadows the premises, a small-time burglar turns up at inconvenient moments, and a scheming aunt lurks in every corridor. The romance zigzags through mistaken identities, midnight escapades, and enough verbal dexterity to fill a London season. Wodehouse's prose dances with precisely-timed wit, treating each absurd escalation with perfect seriousness. This is escapism of the highest order: a world where complicated people stumble toward love through sheer comic momentum, and every sentence leaves you smiling.





















































