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Around the World with Auntie Mame

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93:, and the high seas, meeting and dealing with British nobles, con men, embarrassing relatives, Nazis, and gunrunners before they arrive home again. Much of the action is a slyly satirical commentary on such things as the practice of "presenting at Court," fashionable political activism, the naivete of some Americans abroad, and the ways in which small communities of expatriates often end up behaving. 19: 105:. Two years have passed, with no word beyond a few random post cards. Each chapter begins with Patrick's reassuring, off-hand comments about his journeys with Mame, and then continues with him narrating what really happened. 96:
The main story is encased in a "frame" narrative, in which Patrick, now grown and married, tries to placate his wife with highly edited tales from his travels with his aunt. This takes up where the original novel,
159:
Dennis's novels fell out of fashion for many years, but his best sellers were reprinted in 2003, with forewords and other commentary by present-day humorists and the author's son.
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was reprinted with the restoration of a chapter that had been censored from the original edition. The chapter tells of Auntie Mame's and Patrick's time on a
221: 61:. His Auntie Mame takes him with her on an extended tour of Europe, which becomes a round-the-world tour before his enrollment in 171:. The publisher felt the chapter, however satirical, would not be acceptable coming, as the novel did, at the height of the 216: 58: 149:. Biggest change: in the starting novel Mame Dennis gets married; in the sequel she just gets around" – 117:“As extravagantly full of gags, slapstick comedy, and general hilarious confusion as its predecessor.” – 194: 101:, left off, with Patrick's son Michael going off to India with Mame promising to have him home by 119: 226: 8: 198: 164: 151: 127: 40: 23: 18: 231: 210: 135: 45: 172: 102: 74: 90: 82: 62: 86: 78: 70: 66: 36: 191: 168: 57:
Narrator "Patrick" is seventeen, and has left his private
208: 141:"There is no important difference between 113:Critical reception for the novel in 1958: 17: 209: 108: 145:, which sold 1,500,000 copies, and 13: 14: 243: 222:Works published under a pseudonym 161:Around The World With Auntie Mame 133:“Funnier than the first book.” – 32:Around the World with Auntie Mame 185: 1: 178: 43:and sequel to his bestseller 7: 10: 248: 155:magazine (August 25, 1958) 65:. They have adventures in 125:“Indescribably funny.” – 197:March 23, 2009, at the 120:New York Herald Tribune 52: 27: 22:First edition (publ. 21: 217:1958 American novels 109:Critical reception 28: 239: 201: 189: 147:Around the World 247: 246: 242: 241: 240: 238: 237: 236: 207: 206: 205: 204: 199:Wayback Machine 190: 186: 181: 165:collective farm 128:Chicago Tribune 111: 55: 12: 11: 5: 245: 235: 234: 229: 224: 219: 203: 202: 183: 182: 180: 177: 157: 156: 139: 131: 123: 110: 107: 54: 51: 41:Patrick Dennis 24:Harcourt Brace 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 244: 233: 230: 228: 227:Sequel novels 225: 223: 220: 218: 215: 214: 212: 200: 196: 193: 188: 184: 176: 174: 170: 166: 162: 154: 153: 148: 144: 140: 138: 137: 136:New York Post 132: 130: 129: 124: 122: 121: 116: 115: 114: 106: 104: 100: 94: 92: 88: 84: 80: 76: 72: 68: 64: 60: 50: 48: 47: 42: 38: 34: 33: 25: 20: 16: 192:UIUC website 187: 160: 158: 150: 146: 142: 134: 126: 118: 112: 98: 95: 56: 44: 35:(1958) is a 31: 30: 29: 15: 143:Auntie Mame 99:Auntie Mame 59:prep school 46:Auntie Mame 211:Categories 179:References 173:Red Scare 103:Labor Day 195:Archived 75:Biarritz 167:in the 91:Lebanon 83:Austria 63:college 87:Russia 79:Venice 71:London 67:Paris 37:novel 232:Mame 169:USSR 152:Time 53:Plot 39:by 213:: 175:. 89:, 85:, 81:, 77:, 73:, 69:, 49:. 26:)

Index


Harcourt Brace
novel
Patrick Dennis
Auntie Mame
prep school
college
Paris
London
Biarritz
Venice
Austria
Russia
Lebanon
Labor Day
New York Herald Tribune
Chicago Tribune
New York Post
Time
collective farm
USSR
Red Scare
UIUC website
Archived
Wayback Machine
Categories
1958 American novels
Works published under a pseudonym
Sequel novels
Mame

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