#8 was "The Oxford Companion to Ships & the Sea" by Peter Kemp - a great tool for translators!
"Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit (Jeeves #11)" by P.G. Wodehouse
Rating: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
You really can't rate the Jeeves & Wooster books based on their storylines because they're always the same: Bertie gets himself into a spot of trouble of the female kind and Jeeves has to save his skinny butt. It's the prose that Wodehouse uses that makes every tiny bit a thing of hilarity. Like, he oozed off, he legged it out of the room, my aging relative, I shook the coconut etc. and so on. These are books made for picking up people when they feel down. Also, they are best enjoyed in audio form!
"Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit (Jeeves #11)" by P.G. WodehouseRating: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
You really can't rate the Jeeves & Wooster books based on their storylines because they're always the same: Bertie gets himself into a spot of trouble of the female kind and Jeeves has to save his skinny butt. It's the prose that Wodehouse uses that makes every tiny bit a thing of hilarity. Like, he oozed off, he legged it out of the room, my aging relative, I shook the coconut etc. and so on. These are books made for picking up people when they feel down. Also, they are best enjoyed in audio form!