It’s easy to compare Dorothy L. Sayers with her creation Lord Peter Wimsey. Easy, and fair. Just as Lord Peter is a cultured, brainy type slumming it as an amateur detective (a “noble sleuth” looking for “something new in thrills”), Sayers was doing the same as a mystery writer. Which doesn’t mean she enjoyed it less, or found it any less worthy an occupation, than Lord P enjoys his work. What it means is they both entered into it in the spirit of a game. In Unnatural Death Lord Peter even makes a wager with his Scotland Yard buddy (and brother-in-law) Parker about whether he’ll be able to bring Miss Whittaker to justice. And this before anyone knows if a crime has been committed.
So this is another mystery that pitches us a curve ball. In Whose Body? the curve was the discovery of a body that nobody could identify in a bathtub. In Clouds of Witness the curve was a murder investigation without a murder. In Unnatural Death it’s made clear who the guilty party is, or who at least Lord Peter thinks the guilty party is, right from the start and the only question is how he’s going to prove it. This is what I meant by the way Sayers, like Wimsey, approaches these things in the spirit of a game.
Already by the 1920s the mystery had taken a form that readers felt comfortable (or cozy) with. The locked room. The body in the library. The line-up of the usual suspects. The genealogical tables and maps showing the layouts of rooms. So the challenge for a mystery (and it’s really the same for any genre) writer became how to give readers what they expect (and want), but at the same time give it enough of a twist to make it fresh. I think Sayers did a great job with that.
I think Sayers and Wimsey also shared a similar cultural headspace. Well-read, well-educated (they came to nearly the same thing a hundred years ago), and fascinated by crime and other tabloid events. This results in Lord Peter’s inner and outer monologues where it’s like he’s tossing a salad that’s full of bits of poetry, current affairs, famous criminal cases, and other trivia. I mentioned in my notes on Whose Body? how it could have really used endnotes explaining names and quotations (often slightly mangled, unconsciously or on purpose, “Did somebody write that, or did I invent it? It sounds reminiscent, somehow”). The same goes for Unnatural Death. Once Lord Peter starts humming along it’s hard to keep up. I’m sure a lot of what he throws out would have been picked up on by readers at the time, but today I don’t think there are many people who know Hillaire Belloc’s poem “The Python,” or that Elinor Glyn coined the phrase “It girl.” And these are just a couple of examples that I think at least some people might still get. They’re the easy ones. Now when Lord P says “Criminals always tend to repeat their effects. Look at George Joseph Smith and his brides. Look at Neill Cream. Look at Armstrong and his tea-parties,” I got two out of three of these, but had forgotten the Armstrong case (if you want to look it up: Herbert Rowse Armstrong, executed in 1922 for poisoning his wife, which was just five years before this book came out). But you’d need nearly a page of notes to sort out the following list of headlines:
Chamberlin and Levine flew the Atlantic, and Segrave bade farewell to Brooklands. The Daily Yell wrote anti-Red leaders and discovered a plot, somebody laid claim to a marquisate, and a Czecho-Slovakian pretended to swim the Channel. Hammond out-graced Grace, there was an outburst of murder at Moscow, Foxlaw won the Gold Cup and the earth opened at Oxhey and swallowed up somebody’s front garden. Oxford decided that women were dangerous, and the electric hare consented to run at the White City. England’s supremacy was challenged at Wimbledon, and the House of Lords made the gesture of stooping to conquer.
I managed to check out a number of these, while others remained riddles (who laid claim to a marquisate?). But I don’t think they were riddles in 1927. They were the stories most people, or at least most people who read books, would have been up on.
Leaving this part of the texture of the novel aside and turning to our cast, I was pleasantly surprised by Unnatural Death. Alongside Lord Peter and Parker there are two dominant female figures literally fighting it out. The bad ‘un is Miss Whittaker, Lord P’s worth adversary. She’s a killer in the great golden age tradition, meaning a nurse with a knowledge of drugs and poisons who also has a flare for the dramatic. She’s also a barely concealed lesbian, and the scene where she drugs Lord P, who resists by accident while he’s barking up the wrong tree, plays like Wodehouse comedy, and very effective Wodehouse comedy at that. It’s one of the truly great scenes in the mystery fiction of the period.
Fighting alongside Lord Peter is Miss Alexandra Katherine Climpson, “a spinster made and not born – a perfectly womanly woman.” She’s also an amateur detective with a penchant for writing breathless letters to her boss about what she’s found out. These read almost like social media posts, with their underlinings and exclamations and all caps. She’s a lot of fun, and equal to Lord Peter both in her detection skills and her inability to see the obvious. I say that because one of the reasons I enjoyed this novel so much is that I had it basically all figured out about halfway through. Which actually helps tighten the suspense at the end as Lord P and Miss Climpson keep failing to make contact, leaving them working towards the truth in a stumbling way that puts them both at risk.
Sticking with the cast, we have Lord Peter himself and Parker. As for Parker, I’m unsure of what actual work he does for Scotland Yard as he mainly seems to just toodle around with Lord Peter. But this was before the day of police procedurals and professionalism. Lord Peter, meanwhile, is an unashamed amateur:
I sleuth, you know. For a hobby. Harmless outlet for natural inquisitiveness, don’t you see, which might otherwise strike inward and produce introspection an’ suicide. Very natural, healthy pursuit – not too strenuous, not too sedentary; trains and invigorates the mind.
And yet . . . in a biographical note prepared by his uncle this dilettante is also said to be imbued with the “underlying sense of social responsibility which prevents the English landed gentry from being a total loss, spiritually speaking.” Ah, noblesse oblige. Whatever happened to it? It was good for the soul. As it is, Peter is certainly a toff, perhaps a little callous about the little people (Sayers upbraids him at one point for having “the cheerful brutality of the man who has never in his life been short of money”), but he is still one of the good guys and I found myself warming to him for the first time here.
As a student of crime, Lord Peter also has some theories of his own to put forward. The most interesting of these comes by way of a long disquisition he directs at Parker on the subject of “abnormal crimes,” by which he means crimes that have failed because they have been discovered and the perpetrators caught. “But how about the crimes which are never even suspected?” People are only caught if
“they were fools. If you murder someone in a brutal, messy way, or poison someone who has previously enjoyed rollicking health, or choose the very day after a will’s been made in your favour to extinguish the testator, or go on killing everyone you meet till people begin to think you’re the first cousin to a upas tree, naturally you’re found out in the end. But choose somebody old and ill, in circumstances where the benefit to yourself isn’t too apparent, and use a sensible method that looks like natural death or accident, and don’t repeat your effects too often, and you’re safe. I swear all the heart-diseases and gastric enteritis and influenzas that get certified are not nature’s unaided work. Murder’s so easy, Charles, so damned easy – even without special training.”
Is reported murder only the tip of an iceberg? Are the people who get caught only fools, and the annals of true crime filled with exceptions to a more general slaughter being carried out every day unsuspected? Or is Lord Peter just being superior? This puts me in mind of Eliot Spitzer talking about how stupid most criminals were just before his own downfall. But I’d have to give an endnote now to explain who Spitzer was . . .
I really enjoyed Unnatural Death. Critics were quick to jump on the unrealistic way Miss Whittaker did away with her victims, but I can’t say I cared much about that. I was too busy having fun. As I think Sayers was. And Lord Peter too. How can you not smile at a chapter beginning like this? Here’s a man who enjoys life:
The rainy night was followed by a sun-streaked morning. Lord Peter, having wrapped himself affectionately round an abnormal quantity of bacon and eggs, strolled out to bask at the door of the “Fox-and-Hounds.” He filled a pipe slowly and meditated. Within, a cheerful bustle in the bar announced the near arrival of opening time. Eight ducks crossed the road in Indian file. A cat sprang up upon the bench, stretched herself, tucked her hind legs under her and coiled her tail tightly around them as though to prevent them from accidentally working loose. A groom passed, riding a tall bay horse and leading a chestnut with a hogged mane; a spaniel followed them, running ridiculously, with one ear flopped inside-out over his foolish head.
Lord Peter said, “Hah!”
Ha-hah!






