tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4165889875073228484.post6983664668442651419..comments2023-10-28T06:15:07.880-07:00Comments on Miss Lemon's Mysteries: The Documents in the CaseElizabeth Frengelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13489003861886452176noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4165889875073228484.post-11447240680225570522016-11-22T23:53:20.743-08:002016-11-22T23:53:20.743-08:00So glad to find someone else who thinks this is a ...So glad to find someone else who thinks this is a fascinating book! I've been re-reading it this week (the slim volume is convenient when riding the bus, etc.), and not for the first time have thought it really demonstrates what an excellent novelist DLS was, even if she herself wasn't entirely pleased with the result. It's so well thought out ... even the format fits with the background commentary on the then-new concept of relativity (we get conflicting stories from different characters' perspectives).<br /><br />I pointed out the complexity of the characters to a writer friend, and he agreed that it's very difficult to convey this -- especially for disagreeable traits -- while still enabling the audience to feel some sympathy. (He noted that this is also something that actors love doing, because it's so challenging.) The nicest person in the story (Munting's fiancee) barely appears, and everyone else seems to have traits ranging from being aloof and detached to outright infuriating. The younger Harrison sometimes comes across as a self-righteous jerk ... and yet he's the one who's in the right. (Probably a deliberate contrast with other crime fiction of the era, including Sayers's own Lord Peter stories, where the protagonist is also the investigator ... and the hero.)<br /><br />So why do I like this book so much? Maybe because the author allows such a range of voices and perspectives in the story. This might be another reason why it holds up pretty well over time ... amazing that it was written more than 80 years ago, but many of us can probably name people we know who are very similar to the characters. And while some things have changed (social disapproval of divorce -- it's harder to imagine people being forced to quit their jobs today because they've split up), the tension-filled relationship between the Harrisons, where both parties feel they're the wronged one, is all too common.<br /><br />In its sweep, and the sometimes-uncomfortable twists given to genre conventions, I can't help thinking that this book reminds me a bit of The Red Right Hand (by Joel Townsley Rogers) even if they are different in many ways -- I don't know if you've had a look at it yet, but it's also one that stays in my memory.TapirTroublehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00596819431030750962noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4165889875073228484.post-90351370652206219342011-10-21T03:27:05.456-07:002011-10-21T03:27:05.456-07:00Wonderful blog! Could I be so bold as to suggest ...Wonderful blog! Could I be so bold as to suggest that Miss Lemon look into the works of M M Kaye's detective fiction? I think she will enjoy murderous mayhem in exotic locations. :)scribeswindowhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05724431705478298675noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4165889875073228484.post-52503690685203905012011-10-18T11:32:50.016-07:002011-10-18T11:32:50.016-07:00Wow, that was great. I had no idea. I've yet t...Wow, that was great. I had no idea. I've yet to read the book, and look forward to it, even with all those little details. :<)Nanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15547916206007733970noreply@blogger.com