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  1. Summer Lightning is a novel by P. G. Wodehouse, first published in the United States on 1 July 1929 by Doubleday, Doran, New York, under the title Fish Preferred, and in the United Kingdom on 19 July 1929 by Herbert Jenkins, London.

  2. How Lord Emsworth's pig was stolen, how Sir Gregory Parsloe-Parsloe was accused of the crime, how Mr Baxter fell out of windows and drove Lord Emsworth to the verge of desperation, and much more is all told in Mr Wodehouse's inimitable manner. Show more.

  3. 17 de sept. de 2012 · p. g. wodehouse, summer lightning, audio, radio programmes, 1 of the 11 novels belonging to the blandings castle saga depicting the adventures of clarence, 9th earl of emsworth, and his famous pig, empress of blandings, dramatised for bbc radio.

  4. 2 de jul. de 2012 · P. G. Wodehouse is at his most delightful in this generational romp at Beautiful Blandings Castle, where Lord Emsworth is grieving, first, the dispossession of his beloved prize pig which was somehow stolen in at least four distinct acts of thievery and, second, the untimely return of his erstwhile secretary, the efficient Baxter, while the ...

  5. 16 de mar. de 2024 · In meteorology, the term “heat lightning” comes up during warm, summer evenings. This phenomenon, also known as “silent lightning” or “summer lightning,” features distant, silent flashes. Yet, its name and nature are frequently misunderstood.

  6. Heat lightning, also known as silent lightning, summer lightning, [citation needed] or dry lightning (not to be confused with dry thunderstorms, which are also often called dry lightning), is a misnomer used for the faint flashes of lightning on the horizon or other clouds from distant thunderstorms that do not appear to have accompanying ...

  7. 1 de sept. de 2003 · Summer Lightning, first published in 1929, was the third book in P. G. Wodehouse's Blandings saga, and the first to deal exclusively with the assortment of aristocratic eccentrics and oddities, and their employees and hangers-on who inhabit or, as Lord Emsworth might put it, infest, the place.