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Striding Folly (Mystery Masters Series)
Striding Folly (Mystery Masters Series)
Author: Dorothy L. Sayers
Creator: Ian Carmichael
Publisher: Audio Partners
Category: Book

List Price: $18.95
Buy New: $11.00
You Save: $7.95 (42%)



New (22) from $11.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 339988

Format: Unabridged
Media: Audio CD
Edition: Unabridged
Number Of Items: 2
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7 x 5 x 0.6

ISBN: 1572702230
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.912
EAN: 9781572702233
ASIN: 1572702230

Publication Date: November 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! NEW Book! May have remainder mark. Most orders ship within 1 BUSINESS DAY with ORDER CONFIRMATION.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Striding Folly (Crime Club)
  • Paperback - Striding Folly (Crime Club)
  • Audio Cassette - Striding Folly (Mystery Masters Series)
  • Audio Cassette - Striding Folly (Lord Peter Wimsey Mysteries)

Similar Items:

  • A Presumption of Death: A New Lord Peter Wimsey/Harriet Vane Mystery
  • Thrones, Dominations (A Lord Peter Wimsey Mystery)
  • Clouds of Witness
  • The Nine Tailors
  • Busman's Honeymoon

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
In addition to the title story, in which a nightmare may hold a terrifying premonition, this collection includes "The Haunted Policeman," which features a house numbered thirteen on a street of even numbers; and "Talboys," in which one of Lord Peters own children is accused of theft. Sayers, like Lord Peter, is at the peak of her powers in her final work.


Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars VERY ENTERTAINING   September 21, 2008
Dorothy L. Sayers writings are very entertaining and very suspenseful. She really did fall in love with her creation Lord Peter Wimsey, which can be felt in her novels. She also like the intellectual aproach and give this to all of her characters.


3 out of 5 stars Grand Collection of Posthumous Stories   December 20, 2007
At least in this edition you know what you're getting. I remember the old "New English Library" edition with the name of Dorothy Sayers emblazoned in huge letters, but Striding Folly was written in the tiny tiny type you see in the traditional Alice in Wonderland "Mouse's Tale," so tiny you couldn't help but think cynically that the publishers were pushing a product they didn't really believe in on the strength of the author's name. I guess I could have known it was Striding Folly because of the huge intertwined picture of an obscenely round peach and a white rook, dissolving onto a disappearing and tilted chessboard, very evocative of the three stories in this lovely book.

I used to despise Sayers but I think my hatred should really have been saved for her fans, at least that portion of whom used to use her as a club with which to batter my beloved Agatha Christie. People like Ruth Rendell or PD James, always going on about how superior in every way Sayers was "as a writer." So blind to Christie's genius! Nowadays I can admit that Sayers is a supremely interesting writer, if no genius. Her talents lay in many directions, but what's most interesting about her was her ambition... Wanting to push the traditional Golden Age detective novel into "literary" (translation: middlebrow) directions; wanting later to make religious pageant drama the in thing in the West End stages of the 1930s and 1940s; and then translating Dante without ever really having an ear for poetry--well, not a natural one--it's always her applying herself so meticulously that's the real inspiration to me. She achieved none of her great goals, though she neared them. In the present volume, Striding Folly itself is a peculiar Wimsey tale in which the actual killers are never named--Wimsey just decsribes them in general terms, snaps his fingers, and says, when you find people who look like that, they'll be the culprits.

In "The Haunted Policeman," very reminiscent of Christie's earlier "The Dead Harlequin," Wimsey solves the case without ever leaving his boudoir. Good work man! Unfortunately the story is marred by an ugly word that the haunted policeman uses once or twice, casually, but filled with race contempt, and Wimsey seems either to approve of the policeman's sentiments or to collude with them in the interest of getting another case under his belt. No thanks! It's pretty ugly.

Talboys is another cute one, but after awhile I just lost my sympathies for Peter and Harriet as parents. Obviously little Bredon is a lost cause by age nine. He's doomed to grow up to be the first of the aristocratic Wimsey line (Peter was the 16th descendant of the original belted earl, so I suppose Bredon was the 17th) to be become a serial killer or sociopath, and to think it all started with an honest bit of Wimsey casuistry regarding, if nobody tells you not to steal a neighbor's peaches, is it disobedience or mere theft?



3 out of 5 stars Lacks dramatic tension   October 27, 2007
Three short stories. In the first, the solution is given too early, in the second, the solution seems trite and improbable, and in the third, the crime isn't really serious enough to hold the reader's attention. Not up to her unusal standard.


5 out of 5 stars dorothy sayers Striding Folly   August 11, 2005
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

This is a great rendition of some of Dorothy Sayers' short stories. The narrative is just right, and her humor comes through.


4 out of 5 stars Excellent performance of a mixed bag of stories   August 31, 2004
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

I'm a fan of Dorothy Sayers and especially love her Lord Peter Wimsey stories, and so it's always nice to find a new way to enjoy them. Ian Carmichael richly deserves the raves he has received for his performance here. His narrative was quite easy to listen to, and the voices he gave the characters seemed appropriate and not exaggerated or affected. He brought some beloved characters to aural life, and I could have listened for a lot longer than the relatively brief length of this pair of CDs.

If there's a drawback here, it's the actual stories that were chosen for this set. Without giving anything away (for the sake of mystery-lovers who may not be familiar with the outcome of the mysteries here), I'll note that I've always found "Striding Folly" and "The Haunted Policeman" among the more unsatisfying Wimsey stories. The first one seems to end well short of a proper finish, while the second, told mostly through a policeman's recollections to Lord Peter, violates the old writers' rule about "show them, don't tell them." These weaknesses are somewhat balanced out, however, by merits and pure charm of "Talboys," which I understand was Sayers' final Lord Peter story. Like the novel "Busman's Honeymoon," this story gives the reader a close look at his lordship's private life as well as his mystery-solving skills. Seeing him amid his family this way is a wonderful final image for this popular sleuth.


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