THE TRANSFORMATION OF PHILIP JETTAN
GEORGETTE HEYER
Bibliographical Note
First publication: Mills & Boon, London, 1923
The original edition was published with the subtitle
A Comedy of Manners,
and the author used the pseudonym Stella Martin.
The book was later published as Powder and Patch,
with Chapter Twenty deleted.
Contents
| [One] | The House of Jettan |
| [Two] | In Which Is Presented Mistress Cleone Charteris |
| [Three] | Mr. Bancroft Brings Trouble into Little Fittledean |
| [Four] | The Trouble Comes to a Head |
| [Five] | In Which Philip Finds That His Uncle Is More Sympathetic Than His Father |
| [Six] | The Beginning of the Transformation |
| [Seven] | Mr. Bancroft Comes to Paris and Is Annoyed |
| [Eight] | In Which Philip Delivers Himself of a Rondeau |
| [Nine] | Mr. Bancroft Is Enraged |
| [Ten] | In Which a Letter Is Read |
| [Eleven] | Philip Astonishes His Uncle |
| [Twelve] | Philip Plays a Dangerous Game |
| [Thirteen] | Sir Maurice Comes to Town |
| [Fourteen] | The Strange Behaviour of Mistress Cleone |
| [Fifteen] | Lady Malmerstoke on Husbands |
| [Sixteen] | Mistress Cleone Finds There Is No Safety in Numbers |
| [Seventeen] | Mistress Cleone at Her Wits' End |
| [Eighteen] | Philip Takes Charge of the Situation |
| [Nineteen] | Philip Justifies His Chin |
| [Twenty] | Mademoiselle de Chaucheron Rings Down the Curtain |