Retirement of A.J. Wentworth

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1950s postwar
A01=H.F. Ellis
Author_H.F. Ellis
Category=FBC
Category=FU
Category=FV
Category=FXB
Category=FXR
Category=JNKH
Category=JNLP
Category=PB
Category=YPMF
coming of age
England British
eq_bestseller
eq_classics
eq_fiction
eq_historical-fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
mathematics maths
school teaching private education discipline
wry humorous

Product details

  • ISBN 9781788421843
  • Publication Date: 17 Oct 2019
  • Publisher: Duckworth Books
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The second of the humorous fictional memoirs of a hapless schoolmaster.

A. J. Wentworth, formerly teacher of mathematics at Burgrove prep school for boys, now passes his retirement years in a typically English rural village where somehow he seems unable to stay out of trouble.

Wentworth lurches from mishap to misunderstanding, whether at the Conservative Association or the local dramatic society, the cricket club dinner or the vicarage Christmas Party. His pièce de résistance proves to be the escorting of two schoolboys on a trip to Switzerland that unexpectedly detours into Italy.

A comic study in blinkered English manners, the Wentworth Papers will delight fans of P.G. Wodehouse or Grossmiths' Mr Pooter. First introduced to readers in the pages of Punch magazine, it was later dramatized for both BBC Radio and ITV drama.

 

Humphry Francis Ellis was born in 1907 in Lincolnshire, and educated at Tonbridge and Magdalen College, Oxford. Following a year as assistant master at Marlborough school he began to write for Punch magazine. In 1949 Ellis became Punch’s Literary and Deputy Editor, a post which he held until 1953. It was during this period that he developed the character of A. J. Wentworth, inspired by his experience as a schoolmaster. Punch continued to publish Ellis's work, though from 1954 he found a more lucrative market in The New Yorker, where the Wentworth stories proved very popular.

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