Author:Dorothy L. Sayers,Full Cast
When copywriter Victor Dean falls to his death on the stairs of Pym's Advertising Agency, no one seems to mind. That is, until Lord Peter joins the firm incognito as Dean's replacement and starts asking questions which lead him into a network of blackmailers, drug pushers and one of the most deadly plots of crime fiction. However, before the crimes can be solved and the truth revealed, five more people must die... The elegant, intelligent amateur sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey is one of detective literature’s most popular creations. Ian Carmichael is the personification of Dorothy L. Sayers’ charming investigator in this BBC Radio 4 full-cast dramatisation.
Julia Blackburn's book gives a far more complete idea of Holiday as an artist than anything else I have read
—— GuardianThis is a raw, true book that evokes not just the life of the great singer Billie Holiday but an entire jazz era.... Blackburn's compelling tale is of whores, drug-pushers, bent policemen and crooked lawyers as well as brilliant musicians, and she brings alive everything she touches
—— Mail on SundayThis addition to the tide of Billie Holiday books is extremely welcome. Nowhere else is the context of her life and work so vividly captured
—— Toni MorrisonFull of vigour and colour...Ms Blackburn's portrait of a unique artist is moving, revealing and quite unforgettable
—— EconomistJulia Blackburn...has contributed much to the legacy of a remarkable human being
—— New StatesmanWith her assured touch, she has transcribed and framed the verbatim accounts into a resonant piece of social history, never losing sight of the woman who enthralled everyone with whom she came into contact
—— Financial TimesOften books about jazz musicians make the mistake of over-focusing on the music. Blackburn is more interested in Billie as a person
—— Mike Figgis , GuardianThis is a really marvellous book, the most uninhibitedly intimate portrayal ever of the short, hard life and overall musical triumph of Lady Day...With Billie vividly reflects the chaos that Billie Holiday was born into and only rarely escaped from
—— Spectator