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The Girl on the Boat

The Girl on the Boat

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Preface 

Word Count: 397    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

ls. She was looking for a man just like Sir Galahad, and refused to be put off with any inferior substitute. A lucky

, blundering and hoping, so does the parrot

a country house in Hampshire, where Billie's ideals stil

llie.... It is a Wodehouse no

MO

the public, I should like to say a few words. You, sir, and you, and you at the back, if you will kindly restrain y

e, have read Mr. J. Storer Clouston's "The Lunatic at Large Again." (Those who are chumps enough to miss it deserve no consideration.) Well, both the hero of "The Lunatic" and my "Sam Marlowe" try to get out of a tight corner by hiding in a suit of armour in the hall of a country-house. Looks fishy, yes? And yet I call on Heaven to witness that I

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The Girl on the Boat
The Girl on the Boat
“The Girl on the Boat is a novel by P. G. Wodehouse. The story first appeared as a serial in Woman's Home Companion in the United States, under the title Three Men and a Maid, from October to December 1921. It was first published as a book in the U.S. on April 26, 1922 by George H. Doran, New York, and as The Girl on the Boat in the United Kingdom by Herbert Jenkins, London, on June 15, 1922.”