Summary: A female crime novelist is accused of poisoning a former lover, and Lord Peter falls for her, but he has to prove she is innocent first.
After reading the first two books of the Lord Peter Wimsey mystery series and enjoying them, but being a bit disappointed by a collection of short stories that came next, I decided to skip to Strong Poison (book six), which many reviews suggest was one of the better books in the series.
Strong Poison opens with a judge reciting the facts of the case as he gives instructions to the jury. Harriet Vine is accused of poisoning her former lover several months after they stopped living together. Unfortunately, the facts seem just a little too perfect for Peter Wimsey, and he is convinced that Harriet Vine is innocent.
After a hung jury, Lord Peter sets out to find evidence for his intuition. After meeting regularly with Harriet Vine, he falls in love and has even more reason to prove her innocent.
This is a well-written mystery, and I think the best of the series I have read so far. What I keep discovering about Sayers is that there are many instances of mystery conventions that seem to me to have originated with her in her hands. I have to wonder how much of herself Sayers was writing into this book (and others.) Here, in particular, Harriet Vines is a crime novelist who lived with a man out of wedlock (Sayers secretly had a son raised as her nephew, and his real identity was not revealed until her death.)

Summary: Two long lived people interact, love and fight over generations.





