"Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves" is a sort of sequel to the much earlier "The Code of the Woosters". Once again, Bertram Wooster finds himself as an unwilling and unwanted guest at Totleigh Towers, accompanied by his valet Jeeves. Bertie has been invited to stay by the owner's niece, Stiffy, who desires revenge on the family patriarch for not giving her fiancé, Rev Harold 'Stinker' Pinker, a vicarage. Additionally, Sir Watkyn Bassett's daughter Madeline, still under the misapprehension that Bertie is in love with her, is busily forcing her own fiancé, Gussie Fink-Nottle, to become a vegetarian against his will. Bertie must repair this relationship before it fails, as Madeline has made it clear that if it does, he will be the next in line to share her matrimonial bed, an event that Bertie is extremely eager to avoid.
In the hands of many writers, such a shallow and farcical plot would simply not succeed. However, in the hands of Wodehouse, readers are presented with a book that is light, humorous, and gently mocks the lives of England's idle rich between the two world wars.
Over the years, I have read a considerable number of the Jeeves and Wooster books, and this was one of the later ones to be published. Unfortunately, this shows. While there are a few moments that make you laugh out loud, it is also marred by the occasional recycled joke or situation. Overall, I believe that P.G. Wodehouse is a magical writer, and although this isn't one of the best of his books that I've read, it's still a bit of harmless fun that never takes itself too seriously. I look forward to dipping in and out of his works when I'm in need of some light entertainment.