Dorothy Sayers
Dorothy Sayers is a renowned crime writer known for introducing the character Harriet Vane and raising social issues in her books.
Fiction Writer
June 13, 1893
Gemini
December 17, 1957
64
Oxford, England
Dorothy Sayers, born in Oxford in 1893, was a multifaceted English writer known for her crime novels, poetry, plays, essays, translations, and Christian humanist works. She gained prominence for her Lord Peter Wimsey detective series, which featured the character Harriet Vane and tackled social issues beyond the typical scope of the genre. As one of the “Queens of Crime” during the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, Sayers was in the company of Agatha Christie, Margery Allingham, and Ngaio Marsh. In addition to her detective novels, she translated Dante’s Divine Comedy and produced plays, literary criticism, and essays. Her works, including the popular book “Whose Body?”, continue to be well-regarded today. The introduction of Harriet Vane in her writing solidified Sayers’ position in the upper echelon of crime fiction authors.