| Own? | Title | Year | Summary |
|---|---|---|---|
| N | My Man Jeeves | 1919 | ? |
| Y | The Inimitable Jeeves | 1923 | When Bingo Little falls in love at a Camberwell subscription dance and Bertie Wooster drops into the mulligatawny, there is work for a wet-nurse. Who better than Jeeves? |
| Y | Carry On, Jeeves | 1924 | The immortal Jeeves shimmers into the world of the Woosters, takes on Bertie and carries on from there. |
| N | Very Good, Jeeves | 1930 | Short stories. |
| N | Thank You, Jeeves | 1934 | Due to the unrepentant playing of his banjolele, Jeeves and Bertie part company, the former finding employment with Bertie's old mate Chuffy. Chuffy and Pauline Stoker (previously engaged to the Wooster chap) have fallen in love, but Chuffy is reluctant to pop the question. So when Bertie and Jeeves cook up a plot to smooth out the course of true love, old entanglements look set to rear their heads... |
| N | Right Ho, Jeeves | 1934 | Bertie Wooster begins to wonder whether Jeeves is losing his touch when he offers Gussie Fink-Nottle some advice, which results in his becoming badly unstuck at a fancy dress party. |
| N | The Code of the Woosters | 1938 | Take Gussie Fink-Nottle, Madeline Bassett, old Pop Bassett, the unscrupulous Stiffy Byng, an 18th-century cow-creamer, a small brown leather covered notebook and mix with a dose of the aged aunt Dahlia and one has a dangerous brew which spells toil and trouble for Bertie and Jeeves. |
| N | The Mating Season | 1949 | Originally published in the USA as Jeeves and Bertie Wooster |
| N | Bertie Wooster Sees It Through | 1954 | ? |
| N | Ring for Jeeves (AKA The Return of Jeeves) | 1953? | An oddity in the canon, this is a wooster-less book. It's a bit darker than the usual outing, and Jeeves a bit more larcenous. |
| N | How Right You Are, Jeeves | 1960 | (aka Jeeves in the Offing) Bertie Wooster is puzzled when he reads the newspaper and discovers that Roberta Wickham has accepted his proposal of marriage, although he has no recollection of ever making the proposition in the first place. |
| Y | Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves | 1962 | Gussie Fink-Nottle must marry Madeleine Bassett or Bertie will be obliged to proffer the ring in his stead, so Jeeves and Bertie visit Totleigh Towers, a rural leper colony. It's suicide, but Gussie's engagement to that drip, Madeleine, must somehow be saved. |
| N | The World of Jeeves | 1967 | ? |
| Y | Jeeves and the Tie That Binds | 1971 | (aka Much Obliged, Jeeves) |
| N | Joy in the Morning | 1974 | (AKA Jeeves in the Morning) Trapped in Steeple Bumpleigh, a lesser man than Bertie Wooster would have given way. Ex-fiancee Florence Cray is present, as is "Stilton" Cheesewright, her new fiance. But the biggest blot on the landscape has to be Edwin the Boy Scout whose acts of kindness resembled those of sheer malevolence |
| N | Aunts Aren't Gentlemen | 1974 | 'Go to the country, breathe pure air, go to bed early and get plenty of exercise. If you do not do this, I cannot answer for the consequences.' On doctor's orders Wooster withdraws to the country, there to lead the quiet martini-less life, to sleep the sleep of the just in Maiden Eggesford. The air is nimble, the countryside appealing, and only the presence of the irrepressible aunt Dahlia shatters the rustic peace. As always with aunt Dahlia , an 'imbroglio' develops - destined to be famous down the long years as the "Maiden Eggesford Horror" or "The Case of The Cat Which Kept Popping Up When Least Expected". For however generous or kind-hearted they may be, there is one thing that can be said of aunts as a class: they are not gentlemen. |