Book Description:
Jerome K. Jerome’s Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog) (1889) is a brilliantly comic travelogue chronicling the misadventures of three friends — George, Harris, and the narrator, J. — as they set out on a boating holiday along the River Thames. Accompanied by Montmorency, their ill-tempered fox terrier, the trio’s journey is filled with humorous mishaps, philosophical musings, and delightfully absurd digressions.
Originally intended as a guidebook, the novel quickly abandons practicality in favor of satire, poking fun at Victorian pretensions, health fads, and the universal struggles of camping, navigating, and getting along. Jerome’s playful prose, self-deprecating humor, and keen eye for human nature have made this one of the most beloved works of British comedic literature.
Timeless, warm, and wonderfully silly, Three Men in a Boat continues to charm readers with its wit and its celebration of friendship, idleness, and the joys of the open river.