
A witty, self‑aware satire, this novella opens with a tongue‑in‑cheek preface that treats the very act of publishing like a grand culinary experiment, re‑squeezing articles into book form and boasting of a thousand‑guinea prize. The author lampoons the literary establishment, the pomp of prize‑giving committees, and the pretensions of “up‑to‑date” fiction, promising readers a blend of humor, social observation, and a little harmless mischief.
Against this backdrop we meet a young English aristocrat, masquerading under an inverted name, who embarks on the grand steamer Gloritania en route to America. Sharing a deck‑chair with an enigmatic young woman traveling alone with her mother and maid, he becomes fascinated by the mystery of her purpose and the sheer absurdity of their circumstances. Their tentative conversation, set amid the rhythmic thrum of the ship’s propeller, hints at both romantic curiosity and the broader comic commentary on transatlantic travel and class.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (206K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Gardner Buchanan with help from the distributed proofers system created by Charles Franks
Release date
2003-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1869–1944
Known for warm, witty satire and a sharp eye for everyday absurdity, this Canadian humorist turned small-town life and social pretension into enduring comic literature. He was also a respected academic, balancing a prolific writing career with decades of teaching at McGill University.
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