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Love Among the Chickens
- Narrated by: Jonathan Cecil
- Length: 5 hrs and 1 min
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Publisher's Summary
Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge has hit upon a foolproof plan to get rich quick: he's starting a chicken farm. Dragging his adoring wife Millie and his long-suffering friend and novelist Jeremy Garnet with him to Dorset, he begins his enterprise. Complications ensue, involving the taciturn Hired Man and his bumptious dog, supercilious chickens, irascible professors, angry creditors, and divided lovers.
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What listeners say about Love Among the Chickens
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Amazon Customer
- 03-13-12
Do Not Drive or Operate Heavy Machinery!
What did you love best about Love Among the Chickens?
This is a another great book by the funnest to read and funniest writer in English. On another day, I could go into the relative merits of this book to others, but there comes a point at which one is simply grateful for Wodehouse. This book strongly reinforces that sentiment in me. Perhaps there are sub-par Wodehouse books, and certainly I've enjoyed some more than others (this one is definitely towards the top of the list), but I can't be sure if isn't my own circumstances when I'm listening to the book that make the difference. Certainly, I will say this, there are no Wodehouse series that deserve to be given a miss. Blandings, Jeeves, Mulliner, Ukridge are all fantastic, each shedding light on the others. Wodehouse is a total phenomenon and must be approached as such.
What was one of the most memorable moments of Love Among the Chickens?
Ukridge muttering under his breath and breaking plates just after they break into his country house, his mind motoring along at 150 km/h.
What does Jonathan Cecil bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
Cecil is a master teacher in how to read Wodehouse. Above all, he demonstrates the extent to which you have to let yourself really go to read Wodehouse, and especially with Ukridge, who is a loud boisterous obstreperous sort of fellow, doncha know.
Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?
There were points in this book, perhaps even more than in others, where I found myself running to sit down before I fell over laughing. This audiobook is DANGEROUSLY funny.
9 people found this helpful
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- John
- 12-12-14
Love Between the Ear Buds
Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge is among Wodehouse’s top-flight creations because we have all known people like him. They seem to go through life planning and scheming and failing and never really noticing. It’s an essential character trait in politics. But for you and me (the right sort of people, equipped with a conscience and an adequate supply of shame and guilt) it would make our everyday life into a waking nightmare. Knowing someone else who’s living the nightmare and seems to like it is almost as unnerving.
If, on the other hand, we’re lucky enough to watch someone like that from the safe distance of the printed page or, even better, have Jonathan Cecil read those pages to us—well, then everything is gas and gaiters. We might even start rooting for the blighter (it’s a lot easier when you’re not the one making him a long series of small loans). But most certainly we will laugh. Out loud. And often.
In the interest of full disclosure, I have to admit that I misjudged this book on the first listen. I first met S. F. Ukridge in the short story collection entitled, appropriately enough, “Ukridge”. “Love” predates it by three years, and presents a slightly watered-down version of our long-suffering hero. Or at least I thought so.
My second listen showed me that Ukridge only seems diminished because in this story he has to share more of the stage with his best friend, our narrator. And, besides the vicissitudes of starting a chicken farm from scratch (no pun intended), we also follow our narrator as he woos the girl with whom he came down on the train. Finally, unlike the series of short stories in “Ukridge” that present us with a series of hare-brained schemes (managing a prize fighter, starting a dog college, bilking newspapers of prize money, etc.), “Love” centers on one gigantic hare-brained scheme. All this, I think, gives Ukridge less scope to display his particular brand of dogged perseverance, monumental confidence and breathtaking lack of scruple.
But that said, my first impression was all wrong. Taken on its own merits, “Love Among the Chickens” is a genuine laugh riot. Any author who can describe the moral disposition of a hen and make you laugh is worth a listen or two. Or even three.
As when we watch the running of the bulls at Pamplona or see someone going over Niagara Falls in a barrel, the delight here is in the spectacle of Ukridge doing the exact opposite of what any sane, rational person would do—and believing sincerely, with all his heart, that the scheme is copper-bottomed. Finding ourselves without a nickel, you or I would simply Google the want ads and find a job. But getting up every morning, working and saving a is just too staid a course for Ukridge’s gallant spirit. He always has to aim for the Napoleonic gesture, the Rockefelleresque big coup. And so his failures are Napoleonic, too. The only difference is, Napoleon knew when he was beaten. So the stories—and our delight—continue.
A note might be in order about Ukridge’s domestic arrangements. In “Love” he starts out married. Three years later “Ukridge” ends with him married. In stories that appear in later collections, he is a bachelor. Don’t try to figure it out. Enjoy it. It’s just another example of Wodehouse never letting what he’d written last week get in the way of his latest inspiration.
6 people found this helpful
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- Helen L.
- 05-25-18
Not among the best of PGW!
There is something very wrong with this story. The narrator is not ostensibly the main character, our crooked chicken farmer, but he is really the protagonist because he falls in love and the story circles around that drama. But he is not at all credible. Why would anyone throw themselves into chicken farming with a well known rogue who borrows with no intention of repaying anyone? Why should we as readers expect any girl to fall for a man whom she doesn’t know who then plays a nasty trick on her father—all not quite farcical, but more simply absurd? I guess I listened til the end but it did not really end, just petered out. Wodehouse had an idea. It didn’t work well here. I liked the dog Bob. He was believable.
3 people found this helpful
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- File Squirrel
- 10-21-13
My favorite Wodehouse book & recording
If you could sum up Love Among the Chickens in three words, what would they be?
hilarious, memorable, silly
Who was your favorite character and why?
Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge. A lot of the humor comes from SFU being such an unconventional rascal, ne'er do well.
What about Jonathan Cecil’s performance did you like?
He capably voiced different characters. Lively reading with dramatic/comedic emphasis. Cecil's performance is my favorite, I was so glad when audible added to the store. Before I had the CD audiobook and couldn't enjoy it on my iPod.
Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
The truths in the letter from Aunt Elizabeth. It always makes me feel a bit sympathetic towards Millie Ukridge. I mean, Ukridge's rascally behavior is comical, but gosh there is something tragic in Millie being married to such a flake.
Any additional comments?
Wodehouse had a way with words, and Love Among the Chickens is one of his stories that is a great pick-me-up when you're in need of a laugh. It stands up to repeat listening too. Just try it old horse.
2 people found this helpful
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- Inna Golovach
- 01-16-21
Incomplete book
The audio ends partway through. This is not a complete book. The narrator, of course, is sublime.
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- Chris T
- 08-02-17
Not Jeeves & Wooster But a Lot of Fun!
As always Jonathan Cecil's performance is spot on and hilarious. This story reminded me a great deal of Burtie Wooster and some of the snares he finds himself in. I do miss the Jeeves element though. All in all a very whimsical and entertaining tale.
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- Troy
- 12-19-16
Oops - see my review of Ukridge
So, I accidentally submitted my review for this novel under the second volume, Ukridge! Please read that review first.
http://www.audible.com/listener/Troy/A11SLU2U9L7TJP/ref=a_listener__cco_1_1_rvwTtl?asin=B005N09IE6
Just to complete the dysfunctional cycle, I'll review Ukridge here!!
Ukridge is the first novel of collected stories about the hapless entrepreneur, Stanley Featherstonehaugh Ukridge. The novel, Love Among the Chickens was first published, but narratively speaking, the Ukridge tales obviously comes before LAtC by virtue of Ukridge's marital status.
While the characters in these stories are not quite as amusing to me as Jeeves & Wooster, I find the Ukridge plots more varied and well-crafted than the J&W tales. And nothing goes down better/faster than a collection of Wodehouse short stories. This book has 10 chapters, each of which is about a 45 minute tale. The only recurring character outside of Ukridge and Jimmy Corcoran (his chronicler) is "Battling" Billson, the unpredictable prize fighter upon whom Ukridge occasionally pins his hopes of amassing wealth.
Good stuff. And while a little less funny than the Jeeves & Wooster tales, there are still plenty of moments where I found myself grinning and chortling behind the wheel of my motorcar or whilst ambulating about with my favored canine.