The books of Dorothy L. Sayers, centering on her detective, Lord Peter Wimsey, are among the finest examples of what we call the Golden Age of the detective story. Dating from 1927, "Unnatural Death" was the third Wimsey book.
I think it's an ingenious story, though many other readers think it's one of Sayers's lesser works. Granted, it is not a classic whodunit - rather it's a WHYdunit and even more of a HOWdunit. We learn the murderer's identity fairly early in the book, but there is a remarkably complicated motive to be discovered - and the particularly diabolical method of the murder is the real centerpiece of this book, for the bodies do not reveal any apparent cause of death.
"Unnatural Death" is the subject of this week's review on our podcast, which you may listen to here.
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