Product Description
Price: 0,10€
(as of Sep 03, 2024 14:14:45 UTC – Details)
Martyrs to hypochondria and general seediness, J. and his friends George and Harris decide that a jaunt up the Thames would suit them to a ‘T’. But when they set off, they can hardly predict the troubles that lie ahead with tow-ropes, unreliable weather-forecasts and tins of pineapple chunks – not to mention the devastation left in the wake of J.’s small fox-terrier Montmorency. Three Men in a Boat was an instant success when it appeared in 1889, and proved so popular that Jerome reunited his now older – but not necessarily wiser – heroes in Three Men on the Bummel, for a picaresque bicycle tour of Germany. With their benign escapism, authorial discursions and wonderful evocation of the late-Victorian ‘clerking classes’, both novels hilariously capture the spirit of their age.
ASIN : B00F10Z4K0
Editore : Penguin; Reissue edizione (31 ottobre 2013)
Lingua : Inglese
Dimensioni file : 1549 KB
Da testo a voce : Abilitato
Screen Reader : Supportato
Miglioramenti tipografici : Abilitato
X-Ray : Non abilitato
Word Wise : Abilitato
Memo : Su Kindle Scribe
Lunghezza stampa : 398 pagine
Poor quality edition.
Thatâs just cheap. Annoying to read.
I read Three Men in a Boat when I was in school but didn’t really appreciate it then. The book is very witty and gives a wonderful glimpse of the life of three rather foolish young men of several decades ago. Montmorency the dog steals the show. I sent it to an American friend and she really got the English humor. I haven’t yet read Three Men in a Bummel. I’m looking forward to starting it.
I read Three Men in a Boat as a kid and thought it the funniest book I had ever read. I recently rebought it to see if it lived up to my memories half a century later. It didn’t disappoint. The fractious relationship between the three men is beautifully observed, sending up English pompousness with many laugh out loud passages. Three Men on the Bummel (the follow up) is equally funny. Less about the psychology of the characters, but a wonderfully witty and gentle send-up of the German race, much of which still rings true today, including some prophetic observations about the country’s political future.
Terribly disappointed.The book appears to be a pirated edition. When the book was received, for some reason I could not go through it and it remained stored.I took it out today to read it and was shocked to find that it started from page no. 349, went up to 362 and then started with i. The last page no. is 332. The barcode at the end of the book pasted over the printed barcode also makes it suspicious.It’s too late, of course, to do anything about it now.
Many people would agree with me that Three Men in a Boat is the funniest book ever written. There are few books that can cause you to break out in laughter on public transport, and this is one of them. In theory, this is an account of a trip on the Thames River by three friends in the 1880s, and is theoretically intended as a guidebook. In fact, the author has a difficult time sticking to such winding linearity, and various incidents along the way remind him of others, and so on. There are purple passages (the beauty of the river at sunset) brought up short by reality (smacking into another boat while contemplating the sunset: silly gits). Folks who read this will each have their favorite bits; I myself can quote entire paragraphs from memory.[As bait: I first heard of the book in Chapter One of Robert Heinlein’s Have Spacesuit Will Travel, where the narrator’s father starts to read out the passage about the tin of pineapples – years later when I saw it in a shop, I bought it, and have never been the same since. RAH tricked a lot of us that way].Three Men on the Bummel relates a similar bicycle trip through Germany, and although less highly regarded, it is good to have it bound together with it’s better known sibling. This second story relies for its humor on the contrast between 1880’s Englishmen when confronted with stereotypes of Germans of the same period (cf the story of Herr Schlosenboschen in TMiaB). It is good fun for all that, there are many deviations from the main plot as in the other volume, and there are insights into German culture that are remarkably prescient. [Germans are a good people when well led: their misfortune will be when they are badly led ….]If these stories appeal, I recommend also J’s autobiography, My Life and Times, which is in much the same spirit.
Kein Vergleich mit dem Blödel- und Alber-Film mit Heinz Erhardt (ich bin sein Fan, aber diesen Film halte ich für seinen Tiefpunkt)…Hatte vor einigen Jahren das wunderbare Hörbuch “3 Mann in einem Boot” von Götz Alsmann geschenkt bekommen, der das Buch in einer modernisierten Fassung vorliest (bei ihm wird z. B. aus dem “Housemaids Knee” ein “Tennisellenbogen”; denn: wer weià heute noch um die schwere Arbeit der Dienstmägde, die auf den Knien den Boden schrubben muÃten und deshalb arge Knieschmerzen bekamen? Der Tennisellenbogen ist ein dem heutigen Menschen eher bekanntes Leiden). Habe mittlerweile meine Begeisterung für dieses Hörbuch an viele Menschen in meiner Umgebung weitergegeben, wir könnten fast einen Fanclub gründen.Nun sah ich per Zufall, daà es quasi eine Fortsetzung gibt: Three men on the Bummel.Das Hörbuch im Kopf, habe ich erstmal das Original gelesen, in welcher eine abenteuerliche Bootsfahrt auf der Themse samt deren Vorbereitung und vielen kleinen eingestreuten Erlebnisberichten der drei Helden beschrieben wird und habe mich anschlieÃend auf die Fortsetzungs-Story gestürzt, in welcher die drei Herren eine Fahrradtour durch Deutschland unternehmen.Danke, daà Amazon das Penguin-Büchlein binnen weniger Tage lieferte!Allen, die es nicht so ernst mögen (vor allem Menschen mit etwas medizinischen Kenntnissen, die das Hypochondertum der 3 Protagonisten einordnen können) werden Gefallen finden an dem Trio samt Hund.Ansonsten schlieÃe ich mich den 3 Autoren an, die ihre Rezensionen in Englisch verfaÃt haben (siehe unter “hilfreichste Kundenrezensionen”)