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Three Men in a Boat

Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog),[Note 1] published in 1889,[1] is a humorous novel by English writer Jerome K. Jerome describing a two-week boating holiday on the Thames from Kingston upon Thames to Oxford and back to Kingston. The book was initially intended to be a serious travel guide,[2] with accounts of local history along the route, but the humorous elements took over to the point where the serious and somewhat sentimental passages seem a distraction to the comic novel. One of the most praised things about Three Men in a Boat is how undated it appears to modern readers – the jokes have been praised as fresh and witty.[3]

Three Men in a Boat
1889 edition cover
AuthorJerome Klapka Jerome
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreComedy novel
PublisherJ. W. Arrowsmith
Publication date
1889
ISBN0-7653-4161-1
OCLC213830865
Followed byThree Men on the Bummel 

The three men are based on Jerome himself (the narrator Jerome K. Jerome) and two real-life friends, George Wingrave (who would become a senior manager at Barclays Bank) and Carl Hentschel (the founder of a London printing business, called Harris in the book), with whom Jerome often took boating trips. The dog, Montmorency, is entirely fictional[2] but, "as Jerome admits, developed out of that area of inner consciousness which, in all Englishmen, contains an element of the dog".[3] The trip is a typical boating holiday of the time in a Thames camping skiff.[Note 2]

Following the overwhelming success of Three Men in a Boat, Jerome later published a sequel, about a cycling tour in Germany, titled Three Men on the Bummel (also known as Three Men on Wheels, 1900).

Summary edit

 
Three Men in a Boat – map of tour
 
Frontpage Jerome Three Men in a Boat 1889

The story begins by introducing George, Harris, Jerome (always referred to as "J."), and Jerome's dog, Montmorency. The men are spending an evening in J.'s room, smoking and discussing illnesses from which they fancy they suffer. They conclude that they are all suffering from "overwork", and need a holiday. A stay in the country and a sea trip are both considered. The country stay is rejected because Harris claims that it would be dull, and the sea-trip after J. describes bad experiences his brother-in-law and a friend had on previous sea-trips. The three eventually decide on a boating holiday up the River Thames, from Kingston upon Thames to Oxford, during which they will camp, notwithstanding more of J.'s anecdotes about previous mishaps with tents and camping stoves.

They set off the following Saturday. George must go to work that morning, so J. and Harris make their way to Kingston by train. They cannot find the right train at Waterloo station (the station's confusing layout was a well-known theme of Victorian comedy) so they bribe a train driver to take his train to Kingston, where they collect the hired boat and start the journey. They meet George further up-river at Weybridge.

The remainder of the story describes their river journey and the incidents that occur. The book's original purpose as a guidebook is apparent as J., the narrator, describes passing landmarks and villages such as Hampton Court Palace, Hampton Church, Magna Carta Island and Monkey Island, and muses on historical associations of these places. However, he frequently digresses into humorous anecdotes that range from the unreliability of barometers for weather forecasting to the difficulties encountered when learning to play the Scottish bagpipes. The most frequent topics of J.'s anecdotes are river pastimes such as fishing and boating and the difficulties they present to the inexperienced and unwary and to the three men on previous boating trips.

The book includes classic comedy set pieces, such as the Plaster of Paris trout in chapter 17, and the "Irish stew" in chapter 14 – made by mixing most of the leftovers in the party's food hamper:

I forget the other ingredients, but I know nothing was wasted; and I remember that, towards the end, Montmorency, who had evinced great interest in the proceedings throughout, strolled away with an earnest and thoughtful air, reappearing, a few minutes afterwards, with a dead water-rat in his mouth, which he evidently wished to present as his contribution to the dinner; whether in a sarcastic spirit, or with a genuine desire to assist, I cannot say.

We had a discussion as to whether the rat should go in or not. Harris said that he thought it would be all right, mixed up with the other things, and that every little helped; but George stood up for precedent. He said he had never heard of water-rats in Irish stew, and he would rather be on the safe side, and not try experiments.

Reception edit

One might have imagined … that the British Empire was in danger. … The Standard spoke of me as a menace to English letters; and The Morning Post as an example of the sad results to be expected from the over-education of the lower orders. … I think I may claim to have been, for the first twenty years of my career, the best abused author in England.

— Jerome K. Jerome, My Life and Times (1926)

The reception by critics varied between lukewarm and hostile. The use of slang was condemned as "vulgar" and the book was derided as written to appeal to "'Arrys and 'Arriets" – then common sneering terms for working-class Londoners who dropped their Hs when speaking. Punch magazine dubbed Jerome "'Arry K. 'Arry".[4] Modern commentators have praised the humour, but criticised the book's unevenness, as the humorous sections are interspersed with more serious passages written in a sentimental, sometimes purple, style.

Yet the book sold in huge numbers. "I pay Jerome so much in royalties", the publisher told a friend, "I cannot imagine what becomes of all the copies of that book I issue. I often think the public must eat them."[5] The first edition was published in August 1889 and serialised in the magazine Home Chimes in the same year.[Note 3] The first edition remained in print from 1889 until March 1909, when the second edition was issued. During that time, 202,000 copies were sold.[6] In his introduction to the 1909 second edition, Jerome states that he had been told another million copies had been sold in America by pirate printers.[7] The book was translated into many languages. The Russian edition was particularly successful and became a standard school textbook. Jerome later complained in a letter to The Times of Russian books not written by him, published under his name to benefit from his success.[8] Since its publication, Three Men in a Boat has never been out of print. It continues to be popular, with The Guardian ranking it No. 33 of The 100 Greatest Novels of All Time in 2003,[9] and no. 25 in 2015[10] and Esquire ranking it No. 2 in the 50 Funniest Books Ever in 2009.[11] In 2003, the book was listed on the BBC's survey The Big Read.[12]

In popular culture edit

The river trip is easy to recreate, following the detailed description, and this is sometimes done by fans of the book. Much of the route remains unchanged. For example, all the pubs and inns named are still open, with the exception of The Crown in Marlow, which closed in 2008 .[13][14][15][Note 4]

Audio edit

Audiobooks of the book have been released many times, with different narrators, including Sir Timothy Ackroyd (2013), Hugh Laurie (1999), Nigel Planer (1999), Martin Jarvis (2005) and Steven Crossley (2011).

The BBC has broadcast on radio a number of dramatisations of the story, including a musical version in 1962 starring Kenneth Horne, Leslie Phillips and Hubert Gregg, a three-episode version in 1984 with Jeremy Nicholas playing all of the characters and a two-part adaptation for Classic Serial in 2013 with Hugh Dennis, Steve Punt and Julian Rhind-Tutt.

Film and television edit

Peter Lovesey's Victorian detective novel Swing, Swing Together (1976), partly based on the book, featured as the second episode of the television series Cribb (1980).

In 2005 the comedians Griff Rhys Jones, Dara Ó Briain, and Rory McGrath embarked on a recreation of the novel for what was to become a regular yearly BBC TV series, Three Men in a Boat. Their first expedition was along the Thames from Kingston upon Thames to Oxford, recreating the original novel.[22]

Theatre edit

A stage adaptation earned Jeremy Nicholas a Best Newcomer in a Play nomination at the 1981 Laurence Olivier Awards. The book was adapted by Clive Francis for a 2006 production that toured the UK.[23]

Art edit

A sculpture of a stylised boat was created in 1999 to commemorate Three Men in a Boat on the Millennium Green in New Southgate, London, where the author lived as a child. In 2012 a mosaic of a dog's head was put onto the same Green to commemorate Montmorency.

Other works of literature edit

In 1891, Three Women in One Boat: A River Sketch by Constance MacEwen was published.[24] This book relates the journey of three young university women who set out to emulate the river trip in Three Men in a Boat in an effort to raise the spirits of one of them, who is about to be expelled from university. To take the place of Montmorency, they bring a cat called Tintoretto.[25]

P. G. Wodehouse mentions the Plaster of Paris trout in his 1910 novel Psmith in the City. Psmith's boss, while delivering a political speech, pretends to have personally experienced a succession of men claiming to have caught a fake trout. Psmith interrupts the speech to "let him know that a man named Jerome had pinched his story."[26]

Three Men in a Boat is referenced in the 1956 parody novel on mountaineering, The Ascent of Rum Doodle, where the head porter Bing is said to spend "much of his leisure immersed in a Yogistani translation of it."[27]

In Have Space Suit—Will Travel, by Robert A. Heinlein (1958), the main character's father is an obsessive fan of the book, and spends much of his spare time repeatedly re-reading it.[28]

The book Three Men (Not) in a Boat: and Most of the Time Without a Dog (1983, republished 2011) by Timothy Finn is a loosely related novel about a walking trip.[citation needed]

A re-creation in 1993 by poet Kim Taplin and companions resulted in the travelogue Three Women in a Boat.[29]

Another re-creation of Jerome's journey appeared in the same year. Two and a Half Men in a Boat by novelist Nigel Williams described the author's trip down the Thames accompanied by two friends (explorer JP and BBC executive Alan) and Williams' dog Badger.[30]

Gita sul Tevere is an Italian humorous book inspired by this famous English novel.[citation needed]

Science fiction author Connie Willis paid tribute to Jerome's novel in her own 1997 Hugo Award–winning book To Say Nothing of the Dog. Her time-travelling protagonist also takes an ill-fated voyage on the Thames with two humans and a dog as companions, and encounters George, Harris, 'J' and Montmorency. The title of Willis' novel refers to the full title of the original book.[28]

Fantasy author Harry Turtledove wrote a set of stories in which Jerome's characters encounter supernatural creatures: "Three Men and a Vampire" and "Three Men and a Werewolf" were published in Some Time Later: Fantastic Voyages in Alternate Worlds (2017).[31] "Three Men and a Sasquatch" was published in Next Stop on the #13 in 2019.

Anne Youngson wrote Three Women and a Boat (Penguin, 2021), about three middle-aged strangers setting off on an adventure in a narrowboat.[32][33] The novel was chosen for BBC Radio 2 Book Club.[34]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ The Penguin edition punctuates the title differently: Three Men in a Boat: To Say Nothing of the Dog!
  2. ^ The boat is called a double sculling skiff in the book – that is, a boat propelled by two people, each using a pair of one-handed oars (sculls). A camping skiff is a boat with an easily erected canvas cover. This effectively turns the boat into a floating tent for overnight use.
  3. ^ Home Chimes was published 1884–1894 by Richard Willoughby, London, price 1/-. It was a (first weekly, then monthly) miscellany, mostly fiction by little-known authors. See Magazine Data File
  4. ^ The Blue Posts, 81 Newman Street, London;The Royal Stag and the Manor House (the latter now called The Manor Hotel) at Datchet; The George and Dragon at Wargrave; The Bull at Sonning; The Swan at Pangbourne; The Bull at Streatley; and The Barley Mow at Clifton Hampden. The Bells of Ouseley at Old Windsor still exists, but the building was demolished and rebuilt in 1936. The Crown at Marlow moved to the adjacent building in the 1930s, and a Boots chemist is now in the original location. In its new location, the Crown lasted until 2008, when it was closed permanently, and replaced with first a kitchenware shop, and then a cinema.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Jerome, Jerome K. (1889). Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog). Bristol & London: J.W. Arrowsmith & Simpkin, Marshall & Co. Retrieved 10 April 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ a b Jeremy Lewis' introduction to the Penguin edition.
  3. ^ a b Geoffrey Harvey (1998). "Introduction", Oxford World's Classics edition of Three Men in a Boat; Three Men on the Bummel.
  4. ^ Jerome, Jerome (1926). My Life and Times. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-7195-4089-5.
  5. ^ Jerome, Jerome (1982). "Afterward". Three Men in a Boat, Annotated and Introduced by Christopher Matthew and Benny Green. Michael Joseph. ISBN 0-907516-08-4.
  6. ^ Jerome, Jerome (1909). "Publisher's Introduction". Three Men in a Boat (2nd ed.). Bristol: J W Arrowsmith. ISBN 0-9548401-7-8.
  7. ^ Jerome, Jerome (1909). "Author's Introduction". Three Men in a Boat (2nd ed.). Bristol: J W Arrowsmith. ISBN 0-9548401-7-8.
  8. ^ Jerome K. Jerome (8 July 1902). "Literary Piracy in Russia". The Times. No. 36814. London. col d, p. 4.
  9. ^ "The 100 greatest novels of all time: The list". The Guardian. 12 October 2003. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
  10. ^ "The 100 best novels written in English: the full list". The Guardian. 17 August 2015. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
  11. ^ "50 Funniest books". Esquire. March 2009. p. 142.
  12. ^ "BBC – The Big Read". BBC. April 2003, Retrieved 11 November 2012
  13. ^ https://www.closedpubs.co.uk/buckinghamshire/marlow_crown.html
  14. ^ https://www.bucksfreepress.co.uk/news/2339848.farewell-party-for-marlow-hotel/
  15. ^ https://cinematreasures.org/theaters/69548
  16. ^ Three Men in a Boat (1920) Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  17. ^ Three Men in a Boat (1933) Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  18. ^ Three Men in a Boat (1956) Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  19. ^ Drei Mann in einem Boot at IMDb  
  20. ^ Three Men in a Boat (1975) Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  21. ^ Troye v lodke, ne schitaya sobaki (1979) Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  22. ^ First broadcast: 27 Dec 2010 BBC Two. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  23. ^ Sutton, Katharine (31 October 2006). "Three men in a boat". BBC. Retrieved 12 January 2018.
  24. ^ MacEwen, Constance (1891). Three Women in One Boat: A River Sketch. London: F. V. White. OCLC 156765043.
  25. ^ Buckhorn, Göran R. "Rowing Women as Belles des Bateaux, or To Say Nothing of the Cat". Friends of Rowing History. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
  26. ^ Wodehouse, P. G. (1910). Psmith in the City.
  27. ^ Bowman, W.E. (1956). The Ascent of Rum Doodle. Max Parrish. p. 50. ISBN 0099317702.
  28. ^ a b McCarty, Michael; Koontz, Dean R.; Neil Gaiman (July 2003). "Connie Willis". Giants of the Genre. Wildside Press LLC. p. 126. ISBN 978-1-59224-100-2.
  29. ^ Taplin, Kim (1993). Three Women in a Boat. Impact Books. ISBN 1-874687-13-7.
  30. ^ Williams, Nigel (1993). Two and a Half Men in a Boat. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-0340590478.
  31. ^ AJ Sikes (June 2017). Some Time Later: Fantastic Voyages Through Alternate Worlds. Thinking Ink Press. ISBN 978-1942480204.
  32. ^ Youngson, Anne (2021). Three women and a boat. Liane Payne. London, England. ISBN 978-1-78416-533-8. OCLC 1255799635.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  33. ^ "A new start after 60: 'I always dreamed of being a writer – and published my first novel at 70'". the Guardian. 27 August 2021. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  34. ^ "Radio 2 Book Club - Three Women and A Boat". readinggroups.org. The Reading Agency. 2021. Retrieved 13 April 2024.

General bibliography edit

  • Jerome, Jerome K. Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog). Bristol: Arrowsmith, 1889.
  • Jerome, Jerome K. Three Men in a Boat, to Say Nothing of the Dog! Wordsworth Classics. ISBN 1-85326-051-7, with on the cover, 1993.
  • Jerome, Jerome K., Jeremy Lewis. Three Men in a Boat: To Say Nothing of the Dog! and Three Men on the Bummel. Penguin Classics. London: Penguin Books, 1999. ISBN 0-14-0437509.

External links edit

  • Three Men in a Boat at Project Gutenberg
  • Three Men in a Boat at Standard Ebooks
  • Three Men in a Boat at Internet Archive (scanned books original editions color illustrated)
  •   Three Men in a Boat public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Three Men in a Boat, illustrated epub via Mobileread
  • IMDb search

three, boat, other, uses, disambiguation, nothing, note, published, 1889, humorous, novel, english, writer, jerome, jerome, describing, week, boating, holiday, thames, from, kingston, upon, thames, oxford, back, kingston, book, initially, intended, serious, tr. For other uses see Three Men in a Boat disambiguation Three Men in a Boat To Say Nothing of the Dog Note 1 published in 1889 1 is a humorous novel by English writer Jerome K Jerome describing a two week boating holiday on the Thames from Kingston upon Thames to Oxford and back to Kingston The book was initially intended to be a serious travel guide 2 with accounts of local history along the route but the humorous elements took over to the point where the serious and somewhat sentimental passages seem a distraction to the comic novel One of the most praised things about Three Men in a Boat is how undated it appears to modern readers the jokes have been praised as fresh and witty 3 Three Men in a Boat1889 edition coverAuthorJerome Klapka JeromeCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishGenreComedy novelPublisherJ W ArrowsmithPublication date1889ISBN0 7653 4161 1OCLC213830865Followed byThree Men on the Bummel The three men are based on Jerome himself the narrator Jerome K Jerome and two real life friends George Wingrave who would become a senior manager at Barclays Bank and Carl Hentschel the founder of a London printing business called Harris in the book with whom Jerome often took boating trips The dog Montmorency is entirely fictional 2 but as Jerome admits developed out of that area of inner consciousness which in all Englishmen contains an element of the dog 3 The trip is a typical boating holiday of the time in a Thames camping skiff Note 2 Following the overwhelming success of Three Men in a Boat Jerome later published a sequel about a cycling tour in Germany titled Three Men on the Bummel also known as Three Men on Wheels 1900 Contents 1 Summary 2 Reception 3 In popular culture 3 1 Audio 3 2 Film and television 3 3 Theatre 3 4 Art 3 5 Other works of literature 4 See also 5 Explanatory notes 6 Citations 7 General bibliography 8 External linksSummary edit nbsp Three Men in a Boat map of tour nbsp Frontpage Jerome Three Men in a Boat 1889The story begins by introducing George Harris Jerome always referred to as J and Jerome s dog Montmorency The men are spending an evening in J s room smoking and discussing illnesses from which they fancy they suffer They conclude that they are all suffering from overwork and need a holiday A stay in the country and a sea trip are both considered The country stay is rejected because Harris claims that it would be dull and the sea trip after J describes bad experiences his brother in law and a friend had on previous sea trips The three eventually decide on a boating holiday up the River Thames from Kingston upon Thames to Oxford during which they will camp notwithstanding more of J s anecdotes about previous mishaps with tents and camping stoves They set off the following Saturday George must go to work that morning so J and Harris make their way to Kingston by train They cannot find the right train at Waterloo station the station s confusing layout was a well known theme of Victorian comedy so they bribe a train driver to take his train to Kingston where they collect the hired boat and start the journey They meet George further up river at Weybridge The remainder of the story describes their river journey and the incidents that occur The book s original purpose as a guidebook is apparent as J the narrator describes passing landmarks and villages such as Hampton Court Palace Hampton Church Magna Carta Island and Monkey Island and muses on historical associations of these places However he frequently digresses into humorous anecdotes that range from the unreliability of barometers for weather forecasting to the difficulties encountered when learning to play the Scottish bagpipes The most frequent topics of J s anecdotes are river pastimes such as fishing and boating and the difficulties they present to the inexperienced and unwary and to the three men on previous boating trips The book includes classic comedy set pieces such as the Plaster of Paris trout in chapter 17 and the Irish stew in chapter 14 made by mixing most of the leftovers in the party s food hamper I forget the other ingredients but I know nothing was wasted and I remember that towards the end Montmorency who had evinced great interest in the proceedings throughout strolled away with an earnest and thoughtful air reappearing a few minutes afterwards with a dead water rat in his mouth which he evidently wished to present as his contribution to the dinner whether in a sarcastic spirit or with a genuine desire to assist I cannot say We had a discussion as to whether the rat should go in or not Harris said that he thought it would be all right mixed up with the other things and that every little helped but George stood up for precedent He said he had never heard of water rats in Irish stew and he would rather be on the safe side and not try experiments Reception editOne might have imagined that the British Empire was in danger The Standard spoke of me as a menace to English letters and The Morning Post as an example of the sad results to be expected from the over education of the lower orders I think I may claim to have been for the first twenty years of my career the best abused author in England Jerome K Jerome My Life and Times 1926 The reception by critics varied between lukewarm and hostile The use of slang was condemned as vulgar and the book was derided as written to appeal to Arrys and Arriets then common sneering terms for working class Londoners who dropped their Hs when speaking Punch magazine dubbed Jerome Arry K Arry 4 Modern commentators have praised the humour but criticised the book s unevenness as the humorous sections are interspersed with more serious passages written in a sentimental sometimes purple style Yet the book sold in huge numbers I pay Jerome so much in royalties the publisher told a friend I cannot imagine what becomes of all the copies of that book I issue I often think the public must eat them 5 The first edition was published in August 1889 and serialised in the magazine Home Chimes in the same year Note 3 The first edition remained in print from 1889 until March 1909 when the second edition was issued During that time 202 000 copies were sold 6 In his introduction to the 1909 second edition Jerome states that he had been told another million copies had been sold in America by pirate printers 7 The book was translated into many languages The Russian edition was particularly successful and became a standard school textbook Jerome later complained in a letter to The Times of Russian books not written by him published under his name to benefit from his success 8 Since its publication Three Men in a Boat has never been out of print It continues to be popular with The Guardian ranking it No 33 of The 100 Greatest Novels of All Time in 2003 9 and no 25 in 2015 10 and Esquire ranking it No 2 in the 50 Funniest Books Ever in 2009 11 In 2003 the book was listed on the BBC s survey The Big Read 12 In popular culture editThe river trip is easy to recreate following the detailed description and this is sometimes done by fans of the book Much of the route remains unchanged For example all the pubs and inns named are still open with the exception of The Crown in Marlow which closed in 2008 13 14 15 Note 4 Audio edit Audiobooks of the book have been released many times with different narrators including Sir Timothy Ackroyd 2013 Hugh Laurie 1999 Nigel Planer 1999 Martin Jarvis 2005 and Steven Crossley 2011 The BBC has broadcast on radio a number of dramatisations of the story including a musical version in 1962 starring Kenneth Horne Leslie Phillips and Hubert Gregg a three episode version in 1984 with Jeremy Nicholas playing all of the characters and a two part adaptation for Classic Serial in 2013 with Hugh Dennis Steve Punt and Julian Rhind Tutt Film and television edit Three Men in a Boat a 1920 silent British film with Lionelle Howard as J H Manning Haynes as Harris and Johnny Butt as George 16 Three Men in a Boat a 1933 British film with William Austin Edmund Breon and Billy Milton 17 Three Men in a Boat a 1956 British film with David Tomlinson as J Jimmy Edwards as Harris and Laurence Harvey as George 18 Three Men in a Boat a 1961 German film very loosely based on the book 19 Three Men in a Boat a 1975 BBC produced version for television adapted by Tom Stoppard and directed by Stephen Frears with Tim Curry as J Michael Palin as Harris and Stephen Moore as George 20 Three Men in a Boat Russian Troe v lodke ne schitaya sobaki a 1979 musical comedy filmed by Soviet television with Andrei Mironov as J Aleksandr Shirvindt as Harris and Mikhail Derzhavin as George 21 Peter Lovesey s Victorian detective novel Swing Swing Together 1976 partly based on the book featured as the second episode of the television series Cribb 1980 In 2005 the comedians Griff Rhys Jones Dara o Briain and Rory McGrath embarked on a recreation of the novel for what was to become a regular yearly BBC TV series Three Men in a Boat Their first expedition was along the Thames from Kingston upon Thames to Oxford recreating the original novel 22 Theatre edit A stage adaptation earned Jeremy Nicholas a Best Newcomer in a Play nomination at the 1981 Laurence Olivier Awards The book was adapted by Clive Francis for a 2006 production that toured the UK 23 Art edit A sculpture of a stylised boat was created in 1999 to commemorate Three Men in a Boat on the Millennium Green in New Southgate London where the author lived as a child In 2012 a mosaic of a dog s head was put onto the same Green to commemorate Montmorency Other works of literature edit In 1891 Three Women in One Boat A River Sketch by Constance MacEwen was published 24 This book relates the journey of three young university women who set out to emulate the river trip in Three Men in a Boat in an effort to raise the spirits of one of them who is about to be expelled from university To take the place of Montmorency they bring a cat called Tintoretto 25 P G Wodehouse mentions the Plaster of Paris trout in his 1910 novel Psmith in the City Psmith s boss while delivering a political speech pretends to have personally experienced a succession of men claiming to have caught a fake trout Psmith interrupts the speech to let him know that a man named Jerome had pinched his story 26 Three Men in a Boat is referenced in the 1956 parody novel on mountaineering The Ascent of Rum Doodle where the head porter Bing is said to spend much of his leisure immersed in a Yogistani translation of it 27 In Have Space Suit Will Travel by Robert A Heinlein 1958 the main character s father is an obsessive fan of the book and spends much of his spare time repeatedly re reading it 28 The book Three Men Not in a Boat and Most of the Time Without a Dog 1983 republished 2011 by Timothy Finn is a loosely related novel about a walking trip citation needed A re creation in 1993 by poet Kim Taplin and companions resulted in the travelogue Three Women in a Boat 29 Another re creation of Jerome s journey appeared in the same year Two and a Half Men in a Boat by novelist Nigel Williams described the author s trip down the Thames accompanied by two friends explorer JP and BBC executive Alan and Williams dog Badger 30 Gita sul Tevere is an Italian humorous book inspired by this famous English novel citation needed Science fiction author Connie Willis paid tribute to Jerome s novel in her own 1997 Hugo Award winning book To Say Nothing of the Dog Her time travelling protagonist also takes an ill fated voyage on the Thames with two humans and a dog as companions and encounters George Harris J and Montmorency The title of Willis novel refers to the full title of the original book 28 Fantasy author Harry Turtledove wrote a set of stories in which Jerome s characters encounter supernatural creatures Three Men and a Vampire and Three Men and a Werewolf were published in Some Time Later Fantastic Voyages in Alternate Worlds 2017 31 Three Men and a Sasquatch was published in Next Stop on the 13 in 2019 Anne Youngson wrote Three Women and a Boat Penguin 2021 about three middle aged strangers setting off on an adventure in a narrowboat 32 33 The novel was chosen for BBC Radio 2 Book Club 34 See also edit nbsp Novels portalLocks on the River ThamesRowing on the River Thames Skiffing Thames meander a long distance journey over all or part of the River ThamesExplanatory notes edit The Penguin edition punctuates the title differently Three Men in a Boat To Say Nothing of the Dog The boat is called a double sculling skiff in the book that is a boat propelled by two people each using a pair of one handed oars sculls A camping skiff is a boat with an easily erected canvas cover This effectively turns the boat into a floating tent for overnight use Home Chimes was published 1884 1894 by Richard Willoughby London price 1 It was a first weekly then monthly miscellany mostly fiction by little known authors See Magazine Data File The Blue Posts 81 Newman Street London The Royal Stag and the Manor House the latter now called The Manor Hotel at Datchet The George and Dragon at Wargrave The Bull at Sonning The Swan at Pangbourne The Bull at Streatley and The Barley Mow at Clifton Hampden The Bells of Ouseley at Old Windsor still exists but the building was demolished and rebuilt in 1936 The Crown at Marlow moved to the adjacent building in the 1930s and a Boots chemist is now in the original location In its new location the Crown lasted until 2008 when it was closed permanently and replaced with first a kitchenware shop and then a cinema Citations edit Jerome Jerome K 1889 Three Men in a Boat To Say Nothing of the Dog Bristol amp London J W Arrowsmith amp Simpkin Marshall amp Co Retrieved 10 April 2018 via Internet Archive a b Jeremy Lewis introduction to the Penguin edition a b Geoffrey Harvey 1998 Introduction Oxford World s Classics edition of Three Men in a Boat Three Men on the Bummel Jerome Jerome 1926 My Life and Times Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 7195 4089 5 Jerome Jerome 1982 Afterward Three Men in a Boat Annotated and Introduced by Christopher Matthew and Benny Green Michael Joseph ISBN 0 907516 08 4 Jerome Jerome 1909 Publisher s Introduction Three Men in a Boat 2nd ed Bristol J W Arrowsmith ISBN 0 9548401 7 8 Jerome Jerome 1909 Author s Introduction Three Men in a Boat 2nd ed Bristol J W Arrowsmith ISBN 0 9548401 7 8 Jerome K Jerome 8 July 1902 Literary Piracy in Russia The Times No 36814 London col d p 4 The 100 greatest novels of all time The list The Guardian 12 October 2003 Retrieved 6 June 2017 The 100 best novels written in English the full list The Guardian 17 August 2015 Retrieved 6 June 2017 50 Funniest books Esquire March 2009 p 142 BBC The Big Read BBC April 2003 Retrieved 11 November 2012 https www closedpubs co uk buckinghamshire marlow crown html https www bucksfreepress co uk news 2339848 farewell party for marlow hotel https cinematreasures org theaters 69548 Three Men in a Boat 1920 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 28 June 2013 Three Men in a Boat 1933 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 28 June 2013 Three Men in a Boat 1956 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 28 June 2013 Drei Mann in einem Boot at IMDb nbsp Three Men in a Boat 1975 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 28 June 2013 Troye v lodke ne schitaya sobaki 1979 Internet Movie Database Retrieved 28 June 2013 First broadcast 27 Dec 2010 BBC Two Retrieved 28 June 2013 Sutton Katharine 31 October 2006 Three men in a boat BBC Retrieved 12 January 2018 MacEwen Constance 1891 Three Women in One Boat A River Sketch London F V White OCLC 156765043 Buckhorn Goran R Rowing Women as Belles des Bateaux or To Say Nothing of the Cat Friends of Rowing History Retrieved 2 January 2016 Wodehouse P G 1910 Psmith in the City Bowman W E 1956 The Ascent of Rum Doodle Max Parrish p 50 ISBN 0099317702 a b McCarty Michael Koontz Dean R Neil Gaiman July 2003 Connie Willis Giants of the Genre Wildside Press LLC p 126 ISBN 978 1 59224 100 2 Taplin Kim 1993 Three Women in a Boat Impact Books ISBN 1 874687 13 7 Williams Nigel 1993 Two and a Half Men in a Boat Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 978 0340590478 AJ Sikes June 2017 Some Time Later Fantastic Voyages Through Alternate Worlds Thinking Ink Press ISBN 978 1942480204 Youngson Anne 2021 Three women and a boat Liane Payne London England ISBN 978 1 78416 533 8 OCLC 1255799635 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link A new start after 60 I always dreamed of being a writer and published my first novel at 70 the Guardian 27 August 2021 Retrieved 19 June 2022 Radio 2 Book Club Three Women and A Boat readinggroups org The Reading Agency 2021 Retrieved 13 April 2024 General bibliography editJerome Jerome K Three Men in a Boat To Say Nothing of the Dog Bristol Arrowsmith 1889 Jerome Jerome K Three Men in a Boat to Say Nothing of the Dog Wordsworth Classics ISBN 1 85326 051 7 with Boulter s Lock by Edward John Gregory on the cover 1993 Jerome Jerome K Jeremy Lewis Three Men in a Boat To Say Nothing of the Dog and Three Men on the Bummel Penguin Classics London Penguin Books 1999 ISBN 0 14 0437509 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Three Men in a Boat nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Three Men in a Boat Three Men in a Boat at Project Gutenberg Three Men in a Boat at Standard Ebooks Three Men in a Boat at Internet Archive scanned books original editions color illustrated nbsp Three Men in a Boat public domain audiobook at LibriVox Three Men in a Boat illustrated epub via Mobileread IMDb search Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Three Men in a Boat amp oldid 1218715931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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