I can guarantee that if I read To Say Nothing *first,* and then Three Men, I will NOT re-read To Say Nothing. Not that soon, when there's so many other books wanting to be read.
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
There are many, many books wanting to be read, and yet I've read "To Say Nothing of the Dog" five or six times. I don't think a recent reading of "Three Men" is necessary; you'll recognize them. Have you read "Gaudy Night?" It's a big part of the book too.
Have you read "Gaudy Night?" It's a big part of the book too.
No -- Georgette Heyer? I've heard of it, but never read any Heyer. Will my reading of To Say Nothing suffer if I don't read Gaudy Night?
Dorothy Sayers
Dorothy Sayers
Wow. I was way out of the ballpark on that one. I can't explain the connection my brain made, that I thought Heyer wrote Gaudy Night.
Okay, despite my complete wrongitude about the author, I *do* recall (er, that is, I hope I recall) that Gaudy Night is a Peter Wimsey novel, right? And that there's actually a series of Peter Wimsey novels?
So if I read Gaudy Night to complement To Say Nothing of the Dog, would I be confused by Gaudy Night, since it's in a series? Or is it the first of the series?
If you want the full benefit, you should read all of the books with Harriet. Strong Poison, Have His Carcasse, and then Gaudy Night. It's a big of an investment, but you'll get so much more out of Gaudy Night that way.
This is turning out like an interlocking puzzle. To get the full "crossover"-y benefit, before I read To Say Nothing, it would help to read Gaudy Night. But before I read Gaudy Night, it would help to read Strong Poison and Have His Carcasse.
Truly, I'm not going to stop reading To Say Nothing, go read 3 other books (good though they might be), and then come back to To Say Nothing.
And I *totally* realize no one is saying that I *should* or *must* or anything. I'm just amused by it. (And assuming that there's GOT to be *something* that I'd have to read before Strong Poison to get the full benefit of the Peter Wimsey novels. And THEN perhaps a foreign language.... And THEN a cookbook!)
I've often read good things about the Peter Wimsey novels, and one day I might get to them. But now is not the time. If I read Strong Poison, Have His Carcasse, and then Gaudy Night, I'd bet good money that by then I'd completely forget that I was reading them to get back to To Say Nothing.
Thanks, though, folks, for pointing out the links and stuff!
It helps with Gaudy Night if you speak Latin.
t runs away
t but totally not joking
I knew it!!!
t shakes fist (and lexicon) at Dana....