lightreads: a partial image of a etymology tree for the Indo-European word 'leuk done in white neon on black'; in the lower left is (Default)
lightreads ([personal profile] lightreads) wrote2011-01-06 09:00 pm

The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club by Dorothy Sayers

The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club (Lord Peter Wimsey Mysteries, #4)The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club by Dorothy L. Sayers

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


On the surface, a pleasant puzzle-piecey little murder mystery, with Peter bounding here and there, declaiming and detectiving his way to an answer. But under that . . . yikes. What an uncomfortable book, with people turning and twisting and snagging on each other like brambles on silk. Everyone stuck inside a little box called marriage or poverty or shell shock or police rules. This book is all tight spaces – the badly lit veteran’s club, the body crammed up tight in the phone box, the stifling social scene. There’s something bitter and angry down deep here, something peculiarly postwar and female and stuck in a way I can’t put my finger more precisely on.



And then the little cut of the title, because of course we wouldn’t want anything unpleasant to happen, no no, particularly not to the soldiers who made it home alive, the lucky ones who are clearly and absolutely fine now.



Eek.





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ellen_fremedon: overlapping pages from Beowulf manuscript, one with a large rubric, on a maroon ground (Default)

[personal profile] ellen_fremedon 2011-01-07 02:25 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah. This is the first Wimsey book where the characters really start transforming from types, however charming, into people, and I love it and often come back to it for that reason. But I think it might only be the rigidity of the settings that lets them do it.
ecaterin: Miles's face from Warrior's Apprentice. Text: We have advanced to new and surprising levels of bafflement. (Default)

[personal profile] ecaterin 2011-01-07 02:29 am (UTC)(link)
*runs fucking FAR AWAY from this book*

That 'something particularly postwar and female and stuck' thing gives me the SCREAMING HEEBIE JEEBIES, OMG.

*shudders*
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)

[personal profile] kate_nepveu 2011-01-07 03:03 am (UTC)(link)
What a great observation.

There's something similar about _Have His Carcase_ WRT gender/relationship roles, running alongside mystery-novel meta. Though I'm not sure I'd recommend reading it before _Strong Poison_.