The English Gentleman (Prion Humour Classics S.)

The English Gentleman (Prion Humour Classics S.)

by Douglas Sutherland (Author), Douglas Sutherland (Author), Iain Moncreiffe (Introduction)

Synopsis

Originally written for Debrett's Peerage and now something of a classic, Douglas Sutherland's guide to that endangered species, the English Gentleman, was originally written as an antidote to all the endless, dull little books on manners and etiquette: the kind read by those who long to be recognised as part of the real gentry by the way they use their finger-bowl or address an Archbishop. Both genuinely informative and yet very funny in its self-deprecating tone, The English Gentleman offers a window to the parvenu on the rather perverse world of the genuine article. It describes his habits: where he might live, what he might wear, his school, his clubs, his hobbies and sports, his family and relationships, his behaviour when abroad, his mode of speech and the acceptable way to behave in almost any given situation (invariably the very opposite of what the outsider might think). Not to mention advice on the correct attitude to have toward money (it is vulgar), sex (it is vulgar) and business (it is vulgar unless, of course, it is run at a heavy loss). It all adds up to an unmissable initiation into the eccentric social history of the stiff upper lip. A hilarious and insightful look at the real life counterparts to the sort of squires found in the fiction of Nancy Mitford, PG Wodehouse and Compton Mackenzie. Proving that truth is often stranger than fiction.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 140
Edition: New
Publisher: Prion Books Ltd
Published: 13 Mar 2001

ISBN 10: 1853754188
ISBN 13: 9781853754180

Media Reviews
Extremely funny Jilly Cooper Douglas Sutherland is a most witty exemplar of this vanishing species, and he has written a perfect self-parody of his type New York Times Introduction by Sir Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk, Bart. Drawings by Timothy Jaques
Author Bio
Douglas Sutherland was a descendant in the male line of William, Earl of Sutherland in 1235. He went through private school, public school and the regular army and lived in what he described as the coldest mini-castle in Scotland. He was a well-known shot, salmon fisherman and bon vivant.