Dorothy L. Sayers

Head and shoulders black and white photograph of Sayers as a young white woman with dark hair, centre parted. She is looking down, smiling slightly. A caption reading "Dorothy L. Sayers, author of Whose Body? Published by Boni and Liveright"
1925 press photograph
BornDorothy Leigh Sayers
(1893-06-13)13 June 1893
Oxford, England
Died17 December 1957(1957-12-17) (aged 64)
Witham, Essex, England
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • playwright
  • critic
Alma materSomerville College, Oxford
Genre
  • Crime fiction
  • Translation of Dante
  • Christian writings
Spouse
Oswald Arthur "Mac" Fleming[n 1]
(m. 1926; died 1950)
Children1

Dorothy Leigh Sayers (/sɛərz/ SAIRZ;[n 2] 13 June 1893 – 17 December 1957) was an English crime novelist, playwright, translator and critic.

Born in Oxford, Sayers was brought up in rural East Anglia and educated at Godolphin School in Salisbury and Somerville College, Oxford, graduating with first class honours in medieval French. She worked as an advertising copywriter between 1922 and 1929 before success as an author brought her financial independence. Her first novel, Whose Body?, was published in 1923. Between then and 1939 she wrote ten more novels featuring the upper-class amateur sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey. In 1930, in Strong Poison, she introduced a leading female character, Harriet Vane, the object of Wimsey's love. Harriet appears sporadically in future novels, resisting Lord Peter's proposals of marriage until Gaudy Night in 1935, six novels later.

Sayers moved the genre of detective fiction away from pure puzzles lacking characterisation or depth, and became recognised as one of the four "Queens of Crime" of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction of the 1920s and 1930s, along with Agatha Christie, Margery Allingham and Ngaio Marsh. She was a founder member of the Detection Club, and worked with many of its members in producing novels and radio serials collaboratively, such as the novel The Floating Admiral in 1931.

From the mid‐1930s Sayers wrote plays, mostly on religious themes; they were performed in English cathedrals and broadcast by the BBC. Her radio dramatisation of the life of Jesus, The Man Born to Be King (1941–42), initially provoked controversy but was quickly recognised as an important work. From the early 1940s her main preoccupation was translating the three books of Dante's Divine Comedy into colloquial English. She died unexpectedly at her home in Essex, aged 64, before completing the third book.

  1. ^ Reynolds (1993), p. 179
  2. ^ Reynolds (1993), p. 361


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