P.G. Wodehouse's short story collection brings together tales from his most beloved fictional universes: the pastoral chaos of Blandings Castle, the schemes and disasters of Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge, and the golfing wisdom of the Oldest Member. Lord Emsworth, the amiable peer whose only interests are his prize pig and avoiding his formidable sisters, presides over Blandings as it suffers crime waves, impostors, and the constant threat of relatives. Ukridge appears in his trademark yellow mackintosh with another foolproof plan for making money that invariably collapses in spectacular fashion, leaving Stanley cheerfully undaunted and his friends considerably poorer. The Oldest Member narrates golf stories in which the game becomes inseparable from romance, ambition, and the English class system. Wodehouse's prose style—elaborate similes, faux-literary diction, perfect timing—remains unmatched for sheer sentence-by-sentence pleasure. His comedy depends on precision: the right word in the right place, the comparison that illuminates character through absurdity. These stories, written during Wodehouse's peak years, demonstrate his range within a consistent comic vision. The world of Wodehouse offers refuge from contemporary anxieties in a landscape where problems resolve through implausible coincidences and fundamental decency, where villains are merely inconvenient rather than evil, and where language itself provides endless delight. Readers seeking pure pleasure, a master class in comic prose, or escape into a gentler fictional England will find all three here.