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Whose Body?
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Golden Age Mystery Group Read for June - Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers

Wow - you're so well ahead Ru! Funny that you should make that comparison, as the actor Ian Carmichael has played both the part of Lord Peter Wimsey and Bertie Wooster for many series, back in the day :)
So who is joining us for this one? Reading (officially) starts on 1st June.
So who is joining us for this one? Reading (officially) starts on 1st June.


Well, I am retired so I have a lot of time for reading

Ru wrote: "I finished Whose Body? and I enjoyed this one very much. The comparison to Jeeves and Wooster was very strong. The delightful interaction of Lord Peter with Bunter is very like that of Wooster with..."
If I remember rightly, Bunter was Lord Peter's batman in the war? I really enjoy their relationship - LP isn't super stuffy and uppity with Bunter, they have a pleasant rapport while still maintaining their positions. I love how devoted Bunter is to LP - he takes such tender care of him.
If I remember rightly, Bunter was Lord Peter's batman in the war? I really enjoy their relationship - LP isn't super stuffy and uppity with Bunter, they have a pleasant rapport while still maintaining their positions. I love how devoted Bunter is to LP - he takes such tender care of him.


Yes! I've been finding recently that if Ieave a mystery just for a day or so, to read something else, then I'll have forgotten some important points! That never used to happen ... :( So blocks of time are better for me too.


Barbara K wrote: "After reading The Mutual Admiration Society last year (all about Sayers and her friends), I’m even happier to get back to reading her - with new eyes/ears...."
This one?
The Mutual Admiration Society: How Dorothy L. Sayers and her Oxford Circle Remade the World for Women by Mo Moulton
It looks good! Would you say it would make a good group read? (Sorry - bit off the subject - but just mulling over possibilities for an occasional factual read).
This one?
The Mutual Admiration Society: How Dorothy L. Sayers and her Oxford Circle Remade the World for Women by Mo Moulton
It looks good! Would you say it would make a good group read? (Sorry - bit off the subject - but just mulling over possibilities for an occasional factual read).
Marie wrote: "I read this last year and am getting a head start re-reading it right now since my June will be busier."
Good idea!
Good idea!

It looks good! Would you say it would make a good group read? (Sorry - bit off the subject - but just mulling over possibilities for an occasional factual read).
I thoroughly enjoyed it, especially after getting through the opening chapters. My review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I'm the same Jean. Reading for half an hour or so just doesn't work for me anymore. I find I'm not enjoying books when I do this as there's no flow, I can't get stuck into the characters and story, and as you say I forget what's happened. It's annoying when I like to read in bed before I go to sleep but find I nod off after a couple of pages.....

Yes, I think Bunter was a sergeant in the war with Lord Peter and he is affectionate to him. The same relationship occurs in Jeeves and Wooster except I think Jeeves is much smarter than Wooster.

I have a feeling I might try to squeeze in more Sayers before long, taking the books in sequence so that I can observe her development as a mystery author over time. I read Strong Poison last year and the tone was a bit more complex, especially with the introduction of Harriet Vane.

Barbara K wrote: "I have a feeling I might try to squeeze in more Sayers before long, taking the books in sequence so that I can observe her development as a mystery author over time ..."
I'm considering this idea as well, Barb. I've read a few odd ones out of sequence over the years, but could not get into our previous read of one, with that interminable report of the court scene. Even though some of the stories are familiar from dramatisations, I'd still like to read them in order, for the reason you say :)
I'm considering this idea as well, Barb. I've read a few odd ones out of sequence over the years, but could not get into our previous read of one, with that interminable report of the court scene. Even though some of the stories are familiar from dramatisations, I'd still like to read them in order, for the reason you say :)
I originally read Lord Peter randomly. I found him irritating and irksome. When I decided to read all of them in order, I liked him better and enjoyed the series more.

carolina wrote: "I m in too! I read it some time ago, so it's a re-reading. I agree with you Cozy Pug, reading in order is better to catch Lord Peter's spirit and understand his relationship with Harriet"
Yes, there's something about Lord Peter that I couldn't just jump in randomly and click with him. And Harriet, too - I needed to start from her first appearance to understand her.
Yes, there's something about Lord Peter that I couldn't just jump in randomly and click with him. And Harriet, too - I needed to start from her first appearance to understand her.



Ah well you can't win them all, Fiona :)
Pam - I read the first Jill Paton Walsh follow-up, but wasn't keen enough to read any more.
Interesting about Campion and Lugg. Perhaps we should read some of those :)
Pam - I read the first Jill Paton Walsh follow-up, but wasn't keen enough to read any more.
Interesting about Campion and Lugg. Perhaps we should read some of those :)






I agree. I'm halfway through the book too and I find Parker awesome too!


If some one has mentioned this already, please excuse the repetition.
I haven't read any of the post yet since I'm only halfway through the book.
Lord Peter is entertaining.

I read all of the books years ago except Gaudy Night, which I read a couple of years ago. I loved it too.

The works mentioned by Wimsey were an education for me as I couldn't resist looking up each reference! The only one I read was "The Golden Ass" when I was in high school, but don't recall much of it. But I do remember "Pilgrim's Progress" which is also mentioned when Lady Dowager states that Reuben Levy was "as well loved at home as he was hated abroad" - just the opposite of the description of a character in Pilgrim's Progress (a saint abroad and a devil at home) but that reminded the Dowager of that book.
As Rosemarie stated Wimsey quotes from "Dombey and Son." When Major Joseph Bagstock bursts out in anger when his marriage proposal is rejected - "you'll find him tough, Ma'am - tough is Joseph. Tough, and devilish sly!" Hearing how the lame, 80 year old Mr. Crimplesham is described as "tough" by a waiter, Wimsey recalls the Dickens' character. THEN, he had also thought that Crimplesham could still be the brains behind the crime and makes a different literary reference in his statement, "the aged spider sitting invisible in the centre of the vibrating web." This is a reference from the Sherlock Holmes story about Professor Moriarty in "The Final Problem" per The Complete, Annotated Whose Body?.
Just reading this one book, I have great admiration for Sayers's writing.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Complete, Annotated Whose Body? (other topics)The Mutual Admiration Society: How Dorothy L. Sayers and her Oxford Circle Remade the World for Women (other topics)
Whose Body? (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Dorothy L. Sayers (other topics)Dorothy L. Sayers (other topics)
Charles Dickens (other topics)
Jill Paton Walsh (other topics)
Mo Moulton (other topics)
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This is a perennial favourite! So happy English Mystery reading everyone :)