Listing Bookmarks
List of Bookmarks
-
Summary
Bunter snaps a photo, Peter gets a cough, and Harriet starts a novel. Somehow, in the middle of it all, Harriet and Bunter come to an understanding.
Last bookmarked by maan
26 May 2012
-
Summary
Spring, 1940. In a remote German Army base a captured British intelligence officer resists interrogation and waits for death. But his family has influence even he never suspected they possessed and help is at hand from a wholly unexpected source.
Last bookmarked by maan
26 May 2012
-
Summary
The way Neal says it, though, amused and dismissive, is almost insulting. Of course Peter would never do such a thing, Neal's tone implies. Absurd notion.
Last bookmarked by bookwitch6
26 Apr 2012
-
Summary
In an old Yorkshire inn, in the aftermath of his unsuccessful defence of an accused murderer, Sir Impey Biggs explains his hatred of blackmailers.
Last bookmarked by DrummerWench
19 Apr 2012
-
Rec 3
Summary
Gerald Wimsey wasn't preprared for Hilary Thorpe.
Last bookmarked by venetia_sassy
27 Mar 2012
-
Rec 5
Summary
His loss of dignity didn't even seem to register; he only sat there in the snow staring up at her. "Lee," he said faintly, "you really ought not to joke about these things."
Last bookmarked by venetia_sassy
27 Mar 2012
-
Rec 2
Summary
Harriet, Lord Saint-George and Lord Peter Wimsey meet in 1942.
Last bookmarked by venetia_sassy
27 Mar 2012
-
Rec 4
Summary
An encounter at the end of one career and the beginning of another.
Last bookmarked by venetia_sassy
27 Mar 2012
-
Rec 3
Summary
Gherkins had gotten hold of her fountain pen, and was doodling scratchily all over one end of her blotter. “Aunt Mary,” he said thoughtfully, “when you were Winnie’s age, could you climb trees?”
Last bookmarked by venetia_sassy
27 Mar 2012
-
Summary
2011. Two women are flung together by what seems to be an accident on the Underground. But then the Tube train draws up at a station that was closed in 1932....
Last bookmarked by Darkstar
26 Mar 2012
-
Summary
Harriet Vane was used to odd and artistic people at parties in Bohemian London, but when her ex-lover was found dead she couldn't help wondering whether a certain bloody awful poet might be more than he seemed.
Last bookmarked by NeonFox
18 Mar 2012
-
Summary
The crossroads demons have been around for a long time
Last bookmarked by DrummerWench
17 Mar 2012
-
Summary
When the new Lady Peter begins receiving threatening notes, she decides to solve this mystery on her own.
Last bookmarked by Rynne
10 Mar 2012
-
Summary
When John gets back, a lot of things are different around the BPRD. Most notably all the elves.
Last bookmarked by nessie
19 Feb 2012
-
Rec 7
Summary
Wooster has a reputation for pinching things--necklaces, amber statuettes, umbrellas--a reputation that becomes dashedly awkward when Lord Attenbury's emeralds go missing.
Last bookmarked by laughingacademy
15 Feb 2012
-
Selling Watson, In Four Parts by circa1220bce
Sherlock Holmes & Related Fandoms
This work isn't hosted on the Archive so this blurb might not be complete or accurate.
Summary
Prompt: In order to solve a case Holmes (temporarily) sells Watson into white slavery. Please include: intense bartering and discussion of Watson's worth, gratuitous descriptions of money changing hands AND Holmes playing the part so well that Watson is worried he might actually be sold.
Last bookmarked by Delicious_Vice
1 Feb 2012
-
Rec 7
Summary
“The Zeppo” meets “Gaudy Night”: Slash Edition
Last bookmarked by rea_p
22 Jan 2012
Tags
Notes
A wonderful re-working of Gaudy Night in which all the supporting cast gets the limelight, and the usual Leading Gent and Lady are rarely to be seen.
-
Rec 1
Summary
What if the concert at the end of Gaudy Night had not taken place on a beautiful evening? Peter and Harriet find themselves in the rain.
Last bookmarked by Wren Truesong (waywren)
4 Jan 2012
-
Rec 12
Summary
"...Coppicing is a traditional method of woodland management which takes advantage of the fact that many trees make new growth from the stump or roots if cut down. In a coppiced wood, young tree stems are repeatedly cut down to near ground level. In subsequent growth years, many new shoots will emerge, and, after a number of years the coppiced tree, or stool, is ready to be harvested, and the cycle begins again..."
-
Rec 14
Summary
Viscount Saint-George never meant to make a role model out of his uncle, but somehow Peter wormed himself into Saint-George's conscience.
