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#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!

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!