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The Heart of a Goof

Author: P. G. Wodehouse
Publisher: Classics of Golf
Category: Book

List Price: $33.00
Buy Used: $1.99
You Save: $31.01 (94%)



New (1) Used (10) from $1.99

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 5500261

Media: Hardcover
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1.3

ISBN: 0940889277
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780940889279
ASIN: 0940889277

Publication Date: December 1990
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: book in good condition,tight spine ,like new ,no dust cover same day shipping

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - The Heart of a Goof
  • Hardcover - The Heart of a Goof
  • Paperback - The Heart of a Goof
  • Paperback - The Heart of a Goof
  • Paperback - The Heart of a Goof
  • Paperback - The Heart of a Goof (Penguin Books)
  • Unknown Binding - The heart of a goof
  • Hardcover - The Heart of a Goof
  • Hardcover - The Heart of A Goof
  • Hardcover - The Heart of a Goof

Similar Items:

  • Full Moon
  • Uncle Dynamite (Collector's Wodehouse)
  • My Man Jeeves (Collector's Wodehouse)
  • Money for Nothing
  • The Inimitable Jeeves

Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
Heart of A Goof offers nine of Wodehouse's ripest stories from the 1920s, the characters are united by their worship of golf. From Rodney Spelvin, the sickeningly good-looking romantic poet who comes to his senses when he discovers the game, to Rollo Podmarsh, who finishes his round even when he thinks himself fatally poisoned, and Chester Meredith who discovers eloquence on the eighteenth green, we meet the full range of humanity in fair weather and foul.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Golf--The Final Frontier for Character and Story Telling   December 17, 2004
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

While P.G. Wodehouse is well remembered for his many sterling novels about Bertie Wooster and Jeeves, adventures at Blandings Castle involving the Empress of Blandings and the humorous characters, Ukridge and Psmith, he also took on the honorable and noble game of golf as a source of his humor. Heart of a Goof is the second book of short stories he wrote on this topic and displays a more relaxed sense of humor than in any other of his books that I have read. He makes fun of writing about golf, himself for writing the book, his narrator and even those brave denizens of the golf course. I found the book to be hysterically funny in parts.

While I enjoyed all of the stories in the book, I recommend most highly the last three which involve the same characters in a series of stories that link to one another -- Rodney Fails to Qualify, Jane Gets Off the Fairway and The Purification of Rodney Spelvin. Jane Packard and Williams Bates are dedicated golfers who seem destined for one another, except for a romantic streak in Jane that takes her off to greener pastures from time to time. Rodney Spelvin is her continual tempter with his poetic career and artsy ways. Rodney's ignorance of golf proves to be his Achilles heel.

Each story is introduced by that old reprobate, the Oldest Member, who lies in wait around the golf course waiting for someone to let him bend their ear with another lengthy story. Every club has such a person, and readers will remember many occasions of arriving home hours late after having been waylaid by such a person at their golf club.

The Heart of a Goof is one of the funniest golf stories I have read. It captures the ironies of golf very well. Golf humbles even the mightiest of us, and our greatest failures may follow soon after our sweetest swings.

High Stakes looks at that favorite golfing activity, the bet, in a new light and builds a hilarious scenario around what a dedicated golfer will do to pursue his passions. Keeping in with Vosper continues the same story line and is a very funny look at the effects of an anti-Jeeves manservant.

Chester forgets himself explores a common Wodehouse theme, the fellow who tries to pretend he is better than he is and turns off his love's interest in the process.

The Magic Plus Fours will remind many readers of Dumbo's magic feather and its ability to influence his confidence, that most elusive of all golfing qualities.

The Awakening of Podmarsh looks at that most delicious of all golfing experiences, having a career round. It will bring back happy memories to any golfer.

Fore!







5 out of 5 stars good wodehouse   May 22, 2001
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

heart of a goof is vintage wodehouse, the language as perfectly controlled as a tiger woods putt, spicy with deadpan humor and priceless social commentary. unlike one reviewer i found the ensnarement at the beginning of each story, in which the Oldest Member deftly secures his unwilling audience, different each time, and very funny. the use of golf as a metaphor for life is nothing new but wodehouse had a perfect ear for dialog and a sense of character that carries these little stories beautifully into this century. i hate golf and i still loved this book.


4 out of 5 stars Light & enjoyable golfing stories   January 16, 2001
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Almost anyone will find the 9 short stories in this collection enjoyable. For golfers, this is a can't miss collection.

That being said, "Heart of a Goof" doesn't rate 5 stars. They are not quite on the level of Wodehouse's "Jeeves and Wooster" stories. Furthermore, I found the story's structures annoying after a while: In each story, a younger club member starts a casual conversation with the "Oldest Member," then fails to escape in time to avoid the old guy's narration of the story. This was a clever construction in story #1, getting old by story #5, and downright annoying by story #9.

It's clear that Wodehouse loved golf. But his game differs in some particulars from that which we play today. For example, his talk of "match play" vs. "medal play" might be unintelligible to some golf novices today, and a mention of a casual two-to-three hour 18-hole round will stupefy the modern player accustomed to trudging six hours on a weekend behind a foursome of cart-riders. [Irrelevant aside: I really miss the old names for clubs. Really, would you prefer to swing a 4-iron rather than a "mashie," or a "niblick," or, better yet, a "mashie-niblick"?]

But Wodehouse has it right (from the Preface): "When you turn in a medal score of a hundred and eight on two successive days, you get to know something about life." True.


5 out of 5 stars The clicking of Wodehouse   October 5, 2000
 8 out of 9 found this review helpful

Nine golf stories by P. G. Wodehouse, the Bach of humor fiction. Wodehouse's golf stories are among his best, perhaps because, as a golfer himself, he understood the absurd passion one can have for the game. This is the best of his golf story collections because every one of the stories uses the framing device of being told by the Oldest Member. Which is not to say that you shouldn't search for The Golf Omnibus, which has all 31. But the almost mathematical elegance and consistancy of this collection set it apart.


4 out of 5 stars The tough and dreamy world of golf   June 12, 2000
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

When I read this book I had never played golf in my life. Nevertheless, I laughed and enjoyed it as I have all other books by Wodehouse. Later on I had a chance to learn this sport, and one of the reasons for my accepting this new way of relaxation and exercise was (what else?) remembering the hilarious situations that develop in the links dear P.G. takes us through. Walking along the golf course has made me appreciate even more the depth of Wodehouse's humor.

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