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Three Men On The Bummel, Jerome K Jerome (1900)
Chilvers 0754032175 paperback 313pp
A series of very humorous incidents featuring the triumvirate
who first came to life in Three Men In A Boat - this time hung,
very loosely, on a cycling holiday in Germany

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With Three Men In A Boat, Jerome produced one of the best-selling books
of all time - it had sold a million copies during its first two decades,
and is still in print today. He also originated a style of humorous writing
that has spawned countless imitators in the years since it first hit the
presses. Sadly, while many other authors profited from the format he created,
Jerome himself struggled to follow up his biggest hit.
In many respects a bicycle should be an even more promising vehicle
for carrying a comic tale than a boat - and there are plenty of belly
laughs to be had from this volume. The thread holding together Jerome's
set piece sketches, is pretty thin, though. Indeed, it would be perfectly
possible to extract the cycle-touring strand from the book, and leave
it very little the worse.
Nonetheless, there is much worthwhile to be found in this book. Attitudes
to Germany before the First World War, for example, are striking. At one
point the lead character declares: "(one wonders) whether the Teuton
be a member of the sinful human family or not. Is it not possible that
these placid, gentle folk may really be angles, come down to earth for
the sake of a glass of beer, which, as they must know, can only in Germany
be obtained worth drinking."
Jerome's expectation of the triumph of English as the world's language
would also appear to be the product of the high point of British imperialism.
"The man who has spread the knowledge of English from Cape St Vincent
to the Ural Mountains is the Englishman who, unable or unwilling to lean
a single word of another language but his own, travels purse in hand to
every corner of the Continent....The practical fact is that he is anglicising
Europe."
That said, unpicking Victorian texts like a media studies undergraduate
is no way to enjoy them. Much better to sit back and let Jerome weave
his absurd tales. Whether it be the folly of letting a 'tinkerer' loose
on your bicycle, failing to realise that your wife has fallen off the
back of the tandem, or placing your trust in a wily ship's captain, these
are entertainments that have not lost a jot of their value in the decades
since they first saw the light of day.
PS Nov 09
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