Unknown
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The people involved in the creation of some books cannot be identified. So we call that “unknown.”
Bibliography
The Eighteen-Carat Kid and Other Stories (1980)
Four early short stories by the Master, including the text of William Tell Told Again.
Read online at archive.org.
Electricity: 50th Anniversary TVA (1983)
A detailed look at the three power generation sources used by the Tennessee Valley Authority - hydroelectric, coal burning and nuclear.
Emma (1926)
Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever and rich, fancies her self a match-maker, but after her first effort, she can’t seem to do anything right.
Read online at archive.org.
Enter Psmith (1935)
Originally published as the second part of Mike. On his first day at his new public school Mike meets Psmith, the P is silent, a superannuated Etonian.
Fable Nook and Story Book (1901)
A collection of stories and poems.
Et al
A Final Touch of Beauty on Each Everlasting Shingle (1927)
This advertisement for asbestos cement shingles appeared in The Country Gentleman magazine in 1927.
Fish Preferred (1929)
Galahad Threepwood is ensconced at Blandings Castle working on his memoirs while around him Ronnie Fish is stealing the Empress and various affairs of the heart are going awry.
French Leave (1959)
The story of three American sisters and their adventures in France. Loosely based on a play, ‘Three Blind Mice’ by Guy Bolton.
Read online at archive.org.
Galahad at Blandings (1965)
Gally, as he is known to his friends, displays a sure hand in reuniting sundered hearts and fending off predatory old flames to bring peace once more to the sacred abode of the Empress of Blandings.
Golf Without Tears (1924)
Ten short stories involving golf narrated by the Oldest Member.
Read online at archive.org.
He Rather Enjoyed It (1926)
A collection of ten short stories about Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge, that self absorbed promoter of the impossible.
The Heart of a Goof (1926)
Nine short stories about golf narrated by the Oldest Member.
Read online at archive.org.
Heavy Weather (1933)
A sequel to Summer Lightning, Gally’s memoirs and the Empress are both in danger of theft by scheming visitors to Blandings Castle.
Read online at archive.org.
Hot Water (1932)
A wealthy American woman who wants a ‘dry’ senator to get her husband appointed ambassador to France is in possession of a letter the senator wrote to his bootlegger, a gang of jewelry thieves are interested in the woman’s diamonds, and two or three sets of lovers all foregather at the French resort of St. Roque.
The House by the River (1965)
Steve and Sim head down the river and end up at Villa Louis in Prairie du Chien where they encounter some crooks and spend a night in jail.
The House of Arden (2006)
Edred and Elfrida travel into the past to search for the lost treasure of the House of Arden and succeed in finding their lost father.
I Wish I Had Not Been a Well-Frog (1920)
An article reprinted from the American magazine on the dangers of slipping back when you try to get ahead. Read online at Hathitrust.
Indiscretions of Archie (1921)
Archie, a bankrupt Englishman brings his wife to her native New York to seek her father’s blessing (and a dowry would also be nice) and immediately gets into a row with a hotelier who turns out to be his father-in-law. Read online at archive.org.
The Inimitable Jeeves (1923)
A collection of Bertie and Jeeves short stories.
Jeeves (1923)
A collection of short stories about Bertie Wooster and Jeeves. The image above is from the Penguin Books edition. READ NOW.