Plum Stones (subtitled The Hidden P. G. Wodehouse) is a set of 12 volumes of uncollected short stories by P. G. Wodehouse. All 25 stories were previously published in magazines, but not published in book form in the UK. The volumes were published posthumously between 1993 and 1995 in the UK by Galahad Books. The first two volumes were published in 1993, the following six in 1994, and last four in 1995.[1]
Each volume is a short booklet, with commentary on the stories by Tony Ring. The stories were printed in a limited edition with the permission
of the Trustees of the Wodehouse Estate. The first sixteen sets were issued as an omnibus edition, published in 1993.[2]
UK: Pearson's, December 1914 (as "The Education of Detective Oakes")
US: All-Story Cavalier Weekly, March 13, 1915 (longest of all versions, under the title "The Harmonica Mystery", also printed under that title in The Saint Detective Magazine, June 1955, and in May 1978 in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, the source for this book)
"Mr McGee's Big Day"
US: Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, November 1950
"Mr McGee's Big Day" was six pages long in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. For comparison, another Wodehouse story, "Strychnine in the Soup", was fifteen pages long when published in Ellery Queen in 1952.[3]
Unrepublished Reggie Pepper
Second volume, 76 pages. All three stories feature the early Wodehouse character Reggie Pepper.
Under the title "The Golden Flaw", the story was published in McClure's with illustrations by Arthur William Brown.[4]
"Back to the Garage"
UK: Strand, July 1929 (source for this book)
US: Cosmopolitan, July 1929 (as "Franklin's Favorite Daughter")
"Franklin's Favorite Daughter" was illustrated by David Robinson in Cosmopolitan.[5] In the Strand, "Back to the Garage" was illustrated by S. Abbey.[6]
Keggs, the Butler
Fourth volume, 36 pages.
"Love Me, Love My Dog"
US: Hampton's, July 1920 (as "The Watch Dog", also published in Home in August 1931 as "A Dog-Eared Romance" and Green Book in August 1933 as "The Watch Dog")
UK: Strand, August 1910 (as "Love Me, Love My Dog."; source for this book)
"Watch Dog" was illustrated by Phillips Ward in Hampton's Magazine.[7] "Love Me, Love My Dog" was illustrated by Harry Rountree in the Strand.[8]
McIlvaine, Eileen; Sherby, Louise S.; Heineman, James H. (1990). P. G. Wodehouse: A Comprehensive Bibliography and Checklist. New York: James H. Heineman Inc. ISBN978-0-87008-125-5.