词条 | The Late Scholar |
释义 |
| name = The Late Scholar | title_orig = | translator = | image = The Late Scholar.jpg | caption = 1st North American Edition front cover | author = Jill Paton Walsh | cover_artist = | country = United Kingdom | language = English | series = Lord Peter Wimsey | genre = crime novel | publisher = Hodder & Stoughton | release_date = 05 December 2013 (UK) / 14 January 2014 (US/CAN) | media_type = Print (Hardback & Paperback) | pages = | isbn = 978-1-4447-5190-1 | oclc= | preceded_by = The Attenbury Emeralds | followed_by = }}The Late Scholar is the fourth Lord Peter Wimsey-Harriet Vane detective novel written by Jill Paton Walsh. Featuring characters created by Dorothy L. Sayers, it was written with the co-operation and approval of Sayers' estate. It was published by Hodder & Stoughton (whose "yellow jackets" are alluded to in the book) on December 5, 2013 in the UK, and on January 14, 2014 in North America.[1] Plot summaryThe Late Scholar features the former Lord Peter Wimsey—now the Duke of Denver—and his wife, the former Harriet Vane, and is set in a fictional Oxford college called St. Severin's, mostly in 1953 (according to internal evidence within the text of the novel). Wimsey discovers that, as Duke of Denver, he has inherited the position of Visitor of an Oxford college, St Severin's. The college is in financial difficulties, and is in the midst of an acrimonious dispute between the Fellows over whether or not to sell a valuable codex (a copy of The Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius, with glosses which may be by Alfred the Great) to finance the purchase of a piece of land which might be worth a lot of money if planning permission can be obtained on it. The two sides are evenly balanced in numbers, and two of the Fellows appeal to him to resolve the dispute, and before he has even arrived at Oxford, some of the Fellows turn up at his seat at Bredon Hall to try and convince him of the wisdom of either course of action. Peter and Harriet quickly set off for Oxford. But the dispute turns out to be even worse than they had thought, with attempts (some successful) to murder some of the Fellows. The Warden has the casting vote, but he is nowhere to be found. And some of the successful and unsuccessful attacks resemble the murder methods in Peter's past cases—methods that Harriet has used in her published novels. A side plot concerns the decision of Bredon, the elder son of Peter and Harriet, not to apply for admission to Oxford University—but instead to study estate management at Reading University. While far from stupid, Bredon is not as brilliant as his father, and at Oxford unfavourable comparisons would have been inevitable. Harriet realises that Bredon is not only the son of Peter, but also the nephew of Peter's brother Gerald—who was deeply attached to the land and to the cares of its daily management, in a way that Peter never was. References1. ^The Late Scholar (Paperback) {{ISBN|1444751905}}, {{ISBN|978-1444751901}} External links
6 : 2014 British novels|English novels|Crime novels|Hodder & Stoughton books|Novels set in Oxford|University of Oxford in fiction |
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