13本のエピソード

Whose Body? is the first of Dorothy Sayers’s famous Lord Peter Wimsey novels, introducing that nobleman, as well as his manservant and fellow-sleuth, Mervyn Bunter. Scotland Yard’s Inspector Charles Parker, who figures more or less prominently in later Wimsey novels, plays a central role in Whose Body? as well.

As the book opens, a bashful Battersea architect has discovered a naked body in his bath, adorned with a gold pince nez. At the same time, we learn of the disappearance – under odd circumstances – of Sir Reuben Levy, a powerful financial magnate in The City. Not accepting the police’s early assumption that the corpse and Sir Reuben are one and the same, Wimsey and Parker follow up the two puzzles alternately and interchangeably, coming together to compare notes. Bunter’s peculiar insights and photographic evidence are also important in illuminating the mystery. Ultimately, Lord Peter and Inspector Parker are forced to conclude that the two mysteries are, in fact, pieces of a single, extremely sinister plot.

Whose Body? is not as polished as Sayers’s later novels. However, it is a terrific book. The writing is beautiful, filled with vivid description, dry humor, and interesting (though often arcane) allusions. The story moves quickly, and even Sayers aficionados claim they can’t tell “whodunit” and “why” until at least half way through. This book’s elegant but also extremely friendly prose prefigures Sayers’s position as one of the three or four best of Britain’s “Golden Age” mystery novelists.

(Introduction by Kirsten Wever)

Whose Body? (Version 2) by Dorothy L. Sayers (1893 - 1957‪)‬ LibriVox

    • アート

Whose Body? is the first of Dorothy Sayers’s famous Lord Peter Wimsey novels, introducing that nobleman, as well as his manservant and fellow-sleuth, Mervyn Bunter. Scotland Yard’s Inspector Charles Parker, who figures more or less prominently in later Wimsey novels, plays a central role in Whose Body? as well.

As the book opens, a bashful Battersea architect has discovered a naked body in his bath, adorned with a gold pince nez. At the same time, we learn of the disappearance – under odd circumstances – of Sir Reuben Levy, a powerful financial magnate in The City. Not accepting the police’s early assumption that the corpse and Sir Reuben are one and the same, Wimsey and Parker follow up the two puzzles alternately and interchangeably, coming together to compare notes. Bunter’s peculiar insights and photographic evidence are also important in illuminating the mystery. Ultimately, Lord Peter and Inspector Parker are forced to conclude that the two mysteries are, in fact, pieces of a single, extremely sinister plot.

Whose Body? is not as polished as Sayers’s later novels. However, it is a terrific book. The writing is beautiful, filled with vivid description, dry humor, and interesting (though often arcane) allusions. The story moves quickly, and even Sayers aficionados claim they can’t tell “whodunit” and “why” until at least half way through. This book’s elegant but also extremely friendly prose prefigures Sayers’s position as one of the three or four best of Britain’s “Golden Age” mystery novelists.

(Introduction by Kirsten Wever)

    02 - Chapter 2

    02 - Chapter 2

    • 33分
    03 - Chapter 3

    03 - Chapter 3

    • 25分
    04 - Chapter 4

    04 - Chapter 4

    • 44分
    05 - Chapter 5

    05 - Chapter 5

    • 47分
    06 - Chapter 6

    06 - Chapter 6

    • 55分
    07 - Chapter 7

    07 - Chapter 7

    • 33分

アートのトップPodcast

土井善晴とクリス智子が料理を哲学するポッドキャスト
J-WAVE
味な副音声 ~voice of food~
SPINEAR
これって教養ですか?
shueisha vox
広瀬すずの「よはくじかん」
TOKYO FM
真夜中の読書会〜おしゃべりな図書室〜
バタやん(KODANSHA)
朗読のアナ 寺島尚正
roudoku iqunity

LibriVoxのその他の作品

Right Ho, Jeeves by P. G. Wodehouse (1881 - 1975)
LibriVox
Unspoken Sermons by George MacDonald (1824 - 1905)
LibriVox
Hedda Gabler by Henrik Ibsen (1828 - 1906)
LibriVox
Kreutzer Sonata, The by Leo Tolstoy (1828 - 1910)
LibriVox
Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things by Lafcadio Hearn (1850 - 1904)
LibriVox
Treatise Of Human Nature, Volume 1, A by David Hume (1711 - 1776)
LibriVox