The Harriet books, in order, are Strong Poison, Have His Carcase, Gaudy Night, and Busman's Honeymoon, and IMHO should be read in order. I'd also read Murder Must Advertise after Have His Carcase, even though Harriet isn't in it, because IIRC that's where it falls in the chronology, and it's a fun read.
Glory ,'Potential'
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."
I'm not a Sayers fan and won't be reading more of those, so I guess I'll just have to live with missing something of "To Say Nothing...".
Well, I couldn't get into Three Men in a Boat and still managed to love To Say Nothing of the Dog.
After reading To say nothing of a the dog I got Three men and a boat from the library, but never read it. Does that count?
Murder Must Advertise is probably my favorite of all the Wimsey books.
Atlas Shrugged 2: Shrug Harder.
I don't know how many of you realize that Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand's science fiction classic, is actually only book 1 of a trilogy? Hardly anybody knows this, because she never got around to writing the missing middle volume.
I'm sure it's hilarious if you're more familiar with Ayn Rand than I am.
I loved the Bujold-verse t-shirts!
I read To Say Nothing of the Dog without having read Three Men and A Boat first. I also read the Sayers knowledge without knowing Latin, Greek or French. And enjoyed them!
Another t-shirt, appropriate for an election year.
I loved the Sayers books and, although I never learned French and only managed to pick up some Latin in college, I got enough of what they were saying in Gaudy Night that it made sense. I read To Say Nothing of the Dog without catching all the references ... maybe I should go back and see if I pick them up.
A photo of Will's bench from the Amber Spyglass.
And also, The University of Oxford Botanic Garden in literature.
What? Nobody likes those pictures? You tar-hearted bastards.
ION, after a busy morning I had a respite in the afternoon and was reading up on the history of the British school novel.
Now, I had heard reference to St. Trinian's before because its one of those things that became a compass point in British pop culture. But I didn't realize that Ronald Searle did them, nor that they were somewhat analogous to Addams Family cartoons(though more anarchic and less gothy).
I also didn't realize how horrific Searle's experiences had been as a Japanese prisoner of war. (Nor that he drew the St. Trinian cartoons during his imprisonment, hiding them under disease ridden mattresses which the guards were loathe to investigate. Nor that much of his suffering came from his participation in the prison circulated magazine The Survivor, for which the British authorities at the prison punished him.)
Fascinating.