Anindita Sen
Doctoral Research Scholar, Department of English, Raiganj University, West Bengal, India
Faculty of English, Durgapur Women’s College, Uttar Dinajpur, West Bengal, India
E-mail address: senanindita811994@gmail.com
Abstract
The so-called “Golden Age of Detective Fiction” (c. 1920s–1930s) represents a distinctive moment in literary history when crime fiction crystallized into a form defined by intellectual rigor, narrative symmetry, and ethical closure. Among the era’s most influential practitioners were three women writers—Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, and Ngaio Marsh—whose collective output decisively shaped the conventions and ambitions of the modern detective novel. Frequently grouped together as the “Queens of Crime,” these authors shared a commitment to the principles of fair play, rational explanation, and the closed circle of suspects, yet diverged markedly in their narrative priorities, character construction, and ideological investments.This paper offers a comparative analysis of Christie, Sayers, and Marsh by examining their approaches to plot architecture, detective characterization, narrative style, and social commentary. It argues that Christie perfected the detective novel as a game of pure intellectual deception; Sayers transformed it into a vehicle for psychological depth and moral inquiry; and Marsh balanced puzzle-solving with theatricality and professional realism. By situating their work within the cultural anxieties of the interwar period, the study demonstrates how Golden Age detective fiction simultaneously functioned as escapist entertainment and as a subtle diagnostic tool for examining class, gender, authority, and social order. Ultimately, the paper contends that the enduring appeal of the genre lies not in uniformity but in the productive tensions among these three distinctive yet complementary literary visions.
Keywords: Golden Age Detective Fiction; Agatha Christie; Dorothy L. Sayers; Ngaio Marsh; Whodunit; Fair Play; Social Commentary; Hercule Poirot; Lord Peter Wimsey; Roderick Alleyn