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Unnatural Death [Hardcover]

Dorothy L. Sayers
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton Ltd; New edition edition (2 Aug 1990)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0450527387
  • ISBN-13: 978-0450527388
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,496,777 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Dorothy L. Sayers
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Product Description

Review

'She brought to the detective novel originality, intelligence, energy and wit.' -- P. D. James 'I admire her novels ... she has great fertility of invention, ingenuity and a wonderful eye for detail' -- Ruth Rendell 'D. L. Sayers is one of the best detective story writers.' -- E. C. Bentley, Daily Telegraph --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Review

'She brought to the detective novel originality, intelligence, energy and wit.' (P. D. James )

'I admire her novels . . . she has great fertility of invention, ingenuity and a wonderful eye for detail' (Ruth Rendell )

'D. L. Sayers is one of the best detective story writers.' (E. C. Bentley, Daily Telegraph ) --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
22 of 26 people found the following review helpful
By Kurt Messick HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Dorothy Sayers, a.k.a. Dorothy Leigh Sayers Fleming, one of the first women to ever be granted a degree from Oxford University, created one of the leading figures in, and indeed in so doing helped to create the genre of, the British mystery novels. Lord Peter Wimsey, an elegant, refined London-based aristocrat with a taste for books and a penchant for the piano, is again here the leading figure, in 'Unnatural Death', also published as 'The Dawson Pedigree'.

Wimsey is an old Etonian, Balliol Oxford (of course), served with distinction in His Majesty's forces during the War (this book having been written in 1927, I shall leave it to your good services to deduce which War), who resides both town and country somewhat fashionably, and takes great pride in the ancient family history (by the time one gets to be the fifteenth Duke of anything, the family can be easily considered ancient). Wimsey has a vocation as criminologist, not out of necessity, surely, and not by training either (for such training did not formally exist, but, as an Oxford Arts man, he was trained for most anything intellectual, or at least, that is what an Oxford Arts man would tell you). An interesting addition to the beginning of the book is a short biographical sketch of the fictional Wimsey by his equally-fictional uncle.

All of this, of course, is but preamble to the latest mystery to come calling upon Lord Wimsey. There are the requisite features: a dead woman, Agatha Dawson, wealthy and having left a will that might not be a will, but rather a sham (a delirious woman whose nurse insists that there was no possible way of having made a will during the last month, yet oddly there is a document, complete with a witness who claims that dear old Agatha Dawson wanted nothing to do with the signing -- ah, the plot thickens here).

Of course, to most of the world, Wimsey is, well, following a whimsey of his own. The woman was after all elderly and in poor health; surely his investigations are misplaced. The doctor (not the one who tended Miss Dawson's death, to be sure, but an earlier doctor, suspicious of Dawson's sole heir, her niece) was accused of having blackened the name of Miss Whittaker, the niece, unnecessarily, particularly as no evidence of mischief had been uncovered. Wimsey with the assistance of Inspector Parker are able to rectify the situation vis-a-vis the doctor, but there is still the mystery.

Then, more death. This time the maid. To lose one woman may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose two women... (well, you can fill in the rest yourself).

Of course I won't spoil it for you; perhaps my tag-team reviewers will do that for you, but I sincerely hope not. Suffice it to say, Wimsey proves himself a consummate actor in which the truth comes out (in London, and in style!).

One of the glories of Sayers work is the intricacies of her plots. She tends to get a huge number of people involved (the number of people who seemed to have trouped through the ill woman's bedchamber is in itself surprising, given the era) each with subplots and agenda that nonetheless get neatly resolved in the end. Sayers' development of character (even of the already dead ones!) is done with style and subtlety; while Wimsey is developed over several novels, one doesn't feel him a stranger by reading this one alone. The other characters fit their parts admirably (had Sayers not been a writer, she may well have made a good career as a casting director in Hollywood), in physical and personality attributes.

Her descriptions of the milieu, both in town (London) and in the country (the village and surroundings, in this case, of Hampshire, are interesting reading. Sayers is very much the cosmopolitan, and somewhat condescending toward the countryfolk. However, that is not a heavy element, and perhaps can be written off to her attempt to make Wimsey even more the worldly character he turns out to be over the course of her novels.

In all, an excellent read, a great diversion, and well worth musing over while sipping tea on a Regency-style sofa in one's dressing gown.

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By Brian R. Martin TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
This a classic `British style' mystery featuring Dorothy Sayers' hero Lord Peter Wimsey, a well-educated rich toff, who, relieved of the necessity of working for a living, spends much of his time investigating interesting criminal cases with the assistance of his long-suffering friend, Inspector Parker of Scotland Yard. This one starts when the pair has a chance meeting in a restaurant with a young doctor. He tells them a story of how he was forced to give up his rural GP's practice because he insisted on investigating the death of an elderly female patient of his, who although terminally ill, was not expected to die so suddenly. Wimsey is intrigued by some details of the story, including the actions of the woman's niece, who inherits her aunt's money in the absence of a Will. Despite the absence of any direct evidence that the death was suspicious, Wimsey decides to investigate further. Having quickly established the bare facts of the circumstances, he quickly concludes that the elderly patient was indeed murdered and believes he knows who was the murderer. He sets out to prove his theories.

This is all too much for Parker, who repeatedly reminds Wimsey that the post mortem found no evidence of foul play. Undeterred, Wimsey presses on and installs another of his assistants, a Miss Marples-like spinster called Miss Climpson, in the village where events took place, to secretly gather information about the many characters involved. Eventually Parker is forced to take the possibility of murder seriously when a former maid at the house is killed and other suspicious evidence emerges involving a recent change in the law concerning intestacy, the circumstances why a Will had not been made, and the possible existence of other beneficiaries. A number of false trails are pursed, involving visits to various parts of Sothern England, and another murder occurs before the final mystery is solved and Wimsey's suspicions are vindicated.

Reading this book was an enjoyable trip down memory lane. There are many stock characters, such as Miss Climpson, the local parson, a dim-witted Chief Constable, and some of the rural inhabitants of the village, but they all seem to fit into the story rather well. Even their prejudices, including casual racism, although jarring to modern ears, seems natural for the times. The plot is sufficiently complicated to keep the reader's attention and the final solution, although largely predictable, has one feature that I had not anticipated until the last few pages. Overall, an enjoyable period piece and a good contrast to modern thrillers.
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A Blast from the Past 18 July 2011
Format:Paperback
This was a great read: a clever plot, a story that moves on at a good pace and a satisfying resolution at the end.

The language in parts seems quite strange and inevitably very dated, but this does not detract from the quality of the writing overall, which is intelligent and peppered with all sorts of literary references that fit in very naturally. Reading this has inspired me to re-read more Dorothy L Sayers and I would certainly recommend it to all fans of the classic detective novel.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
An original murder mystery
The third book in Sayers' Lord Peter Wimsey series and my favourite so far (although admittedly I haven't got very far yet). Read more
Published 13 months ago by H. M. Holt
Mystery - kindle price higher than paperback price
Great book, readable and engaging - but the main mystery is why a book that is out of copywrite ( the author died more than 50 years ago in 19957 ) should cost more on kindle than... Read more
Published 16 months ago by C. Page
Lord Peter Wimsey novel
A good piece of writing by Dorothy Sayers. It was complusive reading from begining to end.
Published on 27 Feb 2010 by Ms. Lorraine S. Webb
A lost world
A good read, with an interesting murder method. Not the best Wimsey, but the mass of secondary characters is well-written, and the plot is good. Read more
Published on 12 Aug 2009 by snowqueen01
Unnatural Death
An intriguing plot, well thought out. My main criticism is that the plot dragged somewhat but an enjoyable read nevertheless.
Published on 26 April 2008 by Rich
Good plot, but old fashioned sentiments
Most people read thrillers for the plot and this one delivers on that score. Wimsey's London - Wimsey's world in fact - seems much smaller than that of today. Read more
Published on 23 April 2008 by Graham R. Hill
old-fashioned (in a good way!) murder mystery
Like Agatha Christie, Sayers tells intricate murder tales filled with 3-dimensional characters and plot twists and turns. Read more
Published on 21 Oct 2006 by Roman Clodia
Mystery with style
Dorothy Sayers, a.k.a. Dorothy Leigh Sayers Fleming, one of the first women to ever be granted a degree from Oxford University, created one of the leading figures in, and indeed in... Read more
Published on 17 Jan 2006 by Kurt Messick
Classic detective fiction with the brilliant Peter Wimsey
While this isn't my favourite D.L Sayers, it's a wonderful story, about a young woman suspected of murdering her rich aunt and a servant who signed the aunt's will... Read more
Published on 4 Oct 2000
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