![]() It’s about friendship, and how it ebbs and flows as you yourself grow – or stop growing. It’s about truth, and the need, in a slippery, shifting world, to find the one true thing you’re willing to defend, no matter what the personal cost. It’s a novel about work and the moral value of work the importance – indeed the necessity – of finding the job you’re fitted for and doing it to the very best of your abilities. ![]() ![]() The book feels so fundamental to me, now, that I find it hard to cast my mind back to a time when I hadn’t read it, and harder still to explain what it’s about, because it seems to be about everything. When he gave me the book, therefore, I thanked him vaguely and forgot all about it until, halfway through the train journey home and in lieu of alternative entertainment (this was during the pre-smartphone era), I dug it out and cracked the spine. I’d never heard of Sayers before I wasn’t much of a crime aficionado (I’m still not), and my acquaintance with Golden Age detective fiction to that point had been limited to the 1980s TV series of Miss Marple, which my grandma used to let me stay up to watch. ![]() “You’ll like this,” he said, pulling it off a bookshelf as we were leaving after a weekend’s visit. I first came across Dorothy L Sayers’ Gaudy Night about a decade ago, when my ex-boyfriend’s father pressed a copy on me. ![]()
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