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The Wimsey Papers

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199:, and that the two kinds of dictatorship are equally reprehensible, is given special prominence by being attributed to Lord Peter Wimsey himself. Other characters are shown as expressing the opinion that, even had Britain managed to conclude an alliance with the Soviet Union in 1939, the Soviets would have proven an unreliable ally of little military worth, given their army's weak performance in Finland. On this point Sayers' opinion, like that of most other Britons, did not change in 1941. Getting the Soviets on Britain's side was highly welcome, but the lamentable performance and mass surrenders of the Red Army seemed to bear out the negative assessment. It was only in 1942, when the Germans lost an Army at Stalingrad and American supplies started flowing in, that the resiliency and true strength of Russia became apparent. 232:, an authorized sequel continuing the Wimsey series where Sayers left it off. The letters provided much information which Walsh used in the book: Peter Wimsey and his servant Bunter being on a secret mission abroad, Harriet Vane taking her own children and those of her sister-in-law Mary to the country house Talboys in Hertfordshire, Peter's nephew Jerry an RAF combat pilot, and the unsympathetic Duchess Helen working at the Ministry of Instruction and Morale (about whose work Sayers was rather disparaging). The village dance and air raid practice, which are the starting point for the plot of 27: 156:, evacuation, rationing and the need for the public to take personal responsibility rather than wait for the government to guide them. The subjects range from very practical and detailed advice ranging from such issues as how pedestrians can avoid being hit by cars in the blackout to quite Utopian and far-reaching schemes for the post-war reconstruction of Britain. 252:, Walsh cautioned the eager Wimsey fans that "The Wimsey Papers are not fiction, and were not intended to be read in a continuous chunk" and that "Some of them are about details of war-time history that would now require extensive footnotes in explication". Nevertheless, one such fan made the effort to retype them from archive copies of 175:
a reluctance to go on writing murder mysteries at the time when European dictators were committing mass murders openly and with impunity. This seems to have been Sayers's own feeling, as she in fact abandoned during World War II the writing of murder mysteries and never took it up again.
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The papers do provide some significant new details about Wimsey's character, in particular the ironic epitaph he writes for himself when setting out for a dangerous mission behind enemy lines:
667: 206:. They also show that in addition to his thorough knowledge of the classics of English literature, Wimsey is familiar – though in fundamental disagreement – with the works of 167:
in the previous years, and her doubts about his fitness to lead Britain in war (at the time of writing, it was not yet known that Chamberlain would soon be replaced by
304: 140:
detective novels; but the articles were intended to convey Sayers's opinions and commentaries on various aspects of public life in the early months of the
657: 400: 236:, are also derived from one of Sayers' fictional letters, though the idea of making this the scene of a murder to be investigated was Walsh's. 652: 110: 611: 277: 91: 297: 271: 63: 48: 41: 603: 256:
and make them available online (see External Links). "The Wimsey Papers" are now available as a Kindle ebook from Amazon.
136:. They had the form of letters exchanged by members of the Wimsey family and other characters familiar to readers of the 70: 595: 491: 184: 619: 672: 353: 290: 77: 475: 59: 662: 392: 37: 560: 552: 228: 432: 416: 456: 647: 642: 587: 544: 483: 164: 282: 153: 84: 384: 333: 319: 314: 168: 137: 127: 568: 535: 440: 424: 223: 141: 499: 358: 188: 636: 521: 408: 348: 343: 132: 376: 338: 180: 172: 265: 448: 160: 26: 507: 207: 192: 267:
The Wimsey Papers—The Wartime Letters and Documents of the Wimsey Family
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Other than the selection made by Walsh and incorporated in her book,
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have never been republished. In the Author's Note appended to
210:, and well able to debate with Marxists on their home ground. 20: 204:
Here lies an anachronism in the vague expectation of eternity
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The letters also expressed Sayers's displeasure with the
191:. The opinion that there was little to choose between 130:
published between November 1939 and January 1940 in
579: 532: 467: 368: 326: 548:(1998; based on unfinished manuscript by Sayers) 179:There is a repeated unfavorable opinion of the 298: 8: 668:Works originally published in The Spectator 278:The Wimsey Papers, backed up at archive.org 152:The topics covered include such matters as 305: 291: 283: 111:Learn how and when to remove this message 16:1939 Spectator articles by Dorothy Sayers 401:The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club 47:Please improve this article by adding 7: 14: 226:as the preface for her own novel 171:). The papers also attributed to 218:Some of the letters included in 25: 658:Novels set during World War II 1: 49:secondary or tertiary sources 492:In the Teeth of the Evidence 126:are a series of articles by 653:Novels by Dorothy L. Sayers 620:A Dorothy L. Sayers Mystery 689: 183:, in the aftermath of the 476:Lord Peter Views the Body 623:(1987 television series) 607:(1972 television series) 189:Soviet attack on Finland 468:Short story collections 185:Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact 561:The Attenbury Emeralds 553:A Presumption of Death 250:A Presumption of Death 234:A Presumption of Death 229:A Presumption of Death 36:relies excessively on 433:Murder Must Advertise 417:The Five Red Herrings 588:The Silent Passenger 545:Thrones, Dominations 615:(1973 radio series) 165:Neville Chamberlain 60:"The Wimsey Papers" 596:Busman's Honeymoon 457:Busman's Honeymoon 673:Lord Peter Wimsey 630: 629: 612:Lord Peter Wimsey 604:Lord Peter Wimsey 516:The Wimsey Papers 484:Hangman's Holiday 385:Clouds of Witness 334:Lord Peter Wimsey 320:Dorothy L. Sayers 315:Lord Peter Wimsey 246:The Wimsey Papers 220:The Wimsey Papers 169:Winston Churchill 138:Lord Peter Wimsey 128:Dorothy L. Sayers 124:The Wimsey Papers 121: 120: 113: 95: 680: 569:The Late Scholar 536:Jill Paton Walsh 533:Continuations by 441:The Nine Tailors 425:Have His Carcase 307: 300: 293: 284: 224:Jill Paton Walsh 142:Second World War 116: 109: 105: 102: 96: 94: 53: 29: 21: 688: 687: 683: 682: 681: 679: 678: 677: 633: 632: 631: 626: 575: 534: 528: 463: 393:Unnatural Death 364: 322: 311: 262: 242: 216: 150: 117: 106: 100: 97: 54: 52: 46: 42:primary sources 30: 17: 12: 11: 5: 686: 684: 676: 675: 670: 665: 663:British essays 660: 655: 650: 645: 635: 634: 628: 627: 625: 624: 616: 608: 600: 592: 583: 581: 577: 576: 574: 573: 565: 557: 549: 540: 538: 530: 529: 527: 526: 512: 504: 500:Striding Folly 496: 488: 480: 471: 469: 465: 464: 462: 461: 453: 445: 437: 429: 421: 413: 405: 397: 389: 381: 372: 370: 366: 365: 363: 362: 361:(family title) 359:Duke of Denver 356: 354:Charles Parker 351: 346: 341: 336: 330: 328: 324: 323: 312: 310: 309: 302: 295: 287: 281: 280: 275: 261: 260:External links 258: 241: 238: 215: 212: 149: 146: 119: 118: 33: 31: 24: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 685: 674: 671: 669: 666: 664: 661: 659: 656: 654: 651: 649: 646: 644: 641: 640: 638: 622: 621: 617: 614: 613: 609: 606: 605: 601: 598: 597: 593: 590: 589: 585: 584: 582: 578: 571: 570: 566: 563: 562: 558: 555: 554: 550: 547: 546: 542: 541: 539: 537: 531: 524: 523: 522:The Spectator 518: 517: 513: 510: 509: 505: 502: 501: 497: 494: 493: 489: 486: 485: 481: 478: 477: 473: 472: 470: 466: 459: 458: 454: 451: 450: 446: 443: 442: 438: 435: 434: 430: 427: 426: 422: 419: 418: 414: 411: 410: 409:Strong Poison 406: 403: 402: 398: 395: 394: 390: 387: 386: 382: 379: 378: 374: 373: 371: 367: 360: 357: 355: 352: 350: 349:Miss Climpson 347: 345: 344:Mervyn Bunter 342: 340: 337: 335: 332: 331: 329: 325: 321: 317: 316: 308: 303: 301: 296: 294: 289: 288: 285: 279: 276: 273: 269: 268: 264: 263: 259: 257: 255: 254:The Spectator 251: 247: 239: 237: 235: 231: 230: 225: 222:were used by 221: 213: 211: 209: 205: 200: 198: 194: 190: 186: 182: 177: 174: 170: 166: 162: 157: 155: 147: 145: 143: 139: 135: 134: 133:The Spectator 129: 125: 115: 112: 104: 101:November 2010 93: 90: 86: 83: 79: 76: 72: 69: 65: 62: â€“  61: 57: 56:Find sources: 50: 44: 43: 39: 34:This article 32: 28: 23: 22: 19: 618: 610: 602: 594: 586: 567: 559: 551: 543: 520: 515: 514: 506: 498: 490: 482: 474: 455: 447: 439: 431: 423: 415: 407: 399: 391: 383: 375: 339:Harriet Vane 313: 266: 253: 249: 245: 243: 240:Availability 233: 227: 219: 217: 203: 201: 181:Soviet Union 178: 173:Harriet Vane 163:policies of 158: 151: 131: 123: 122: 107: 98: 88: 81: 74: 67: 55: 35: 18: 648:1940 essays 643:1939 essays 599:(1940 film) 591:(1935 film) 580:Adaptations 525:(1939-1940) 449:Gaudy Night 377:Whose Body? 318:stories by 214:Later reuse 161:appeasement 637:Categories 508:Lord Peter 327:Characters 272:Faded Page 71:newspapers 38:references 208:Karl Marx 193:communism 274:(Canada) 187:and the 154:blackout 197:fascism 148:Content 85:scholar 572:(2013) 564:(2010) 556:(2002) 511:(1972) 503:(1972) 495:(1939) 487:(1933) 479:(1928) 460:(1937) 452:(1935) 444:(1934) 436:(1933) 428:(1932) 420:(1931) 412:(1931) 404:(1928) 396:(1927) 388:(1926) 380:(1923) 369:Novels 87:  80:  73:  66:  58:  92:JSTOR 78:books 195:and 64:news 519:in 270:at 40:to 639:: 144:. 51:. 306:e 299:t 292:v 114:) 108:( 103:) 99:( 89:· 82:· 75:· 68:· 45:.

Index


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secondary or tertiary sources
"The Wimsey Papers"
news
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Learn how and when to remove this message
Dorothy L. Sayers
The Spectator
Lord Peter Wimsey
Second World War
blackout
appeasement
Neville Chamberlain
Winston Churchill
Harriet Vane
Soviet Union
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact
Soviet attack on Finland
communism
fascism
Karl Marx
Jill Paton Walsh
A Presumption of Death
The Wimsey Papers—The Wartime Letters and Documents of the Wimsey Family
Faded Page

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