If you are
looking for a cracking good mystery, you may be disappointed with all the
dialogue about marriage, but for me those conversations were what made the book
my favorite of all the Lord Peter novels. Sayers herself described it as “a
love story with detective interruptions.”
Sayer’s
novel are loaded with scrumptious literary references. Lord Peter and Inspector Kirk cheerfully exchange quotes from the Bible, Shakespeare, Tennyson, Browning, Keats, etc. I wish I could find an annotated version of this novel to
save me time from looking up translations of the Latin and French, but as it
was, I looked up about half the references and was richly rewarded in
discovering their meaning. Frankly, most of them were discreet reference to
sexuality that would have made me blush considerably in my younger years.
There is a
lot of (discreet) talk about previous liaisons, expectations for the wedding
night, etc., which I could appreciate after my three decades of marriage
because they showed Peter and Harriet wrestling with every aspect of their
marriage, not sugar-coating the past, but showing their growth in understanding
of what true love entails. I thoroughly enjoyed watching them come to grips
with the tough realities and indescribable joys of marital commitment.
In spite of
all the fancy quotes, Lord Peter finally concludes: And what do all the great
words come to in the end, but that? – I love you – I am at rest with you – I have
come home.
As if the
love story weren’t enough, the mystery is quite good. AND BUNTER GETS HIS DUE
as the devoted, unruffled servant - so much so that Harriet jokes that maybe
she should have married him instead of Lord Peter. I don’t know a thing about wine,
but the care with which Bunter handled the liquor in this book was
laugh-out-loud hilarious.
A
delightful read from start to finish. This is not a stand-alone novel. It is
necessary to read the previous novels to get the full impact of how Harriet and
Lord Peter are piecing their new lives together. Bravo to Dorothy Sayers for
showing the beauty and complexity of it.
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