The intimate story of PG Wodehouse's fall from grace and how the man who defined Englishness became an exile from his own country. In the summer of 1941, PG Wodehouse, creator of Jeeves and Wooster and master of fanciful plots, became a major player in a tale of realpolitik. From an internment camp in Upper Silesia to broadcasting on German radio in Berlin and accusations of treachery, Wodehouse became a pawn in the biggest propaganda battle of the Second World War as the German Foreign Office tried to persuade the Americans to stay out of the war on the eve of Operation Barbarossa and the British to persuade America to join the Allies and save a beleaguered nation.