| Authors: 
							A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Sa -> Samartin -> Sansom -> Santangelo -> Sayers -> Scarborough -> Schenkel -> Scott -> Scott -> Scuro -> Shaara -> Shaw -> Shepherd -> Shields -> Shreve -> Silbert -> Simenon -> Simmons -> Skibell -> Smith -> Smith -> Smith -> Smolens -> Soucy -> Specks -> Stanfill -> Steil -> Stevens -> Stokes-Chapman -> Stringfellow -> Sussman -> Swift
 | 
						| 
 | 
						
							|      | Dorothy L. Sayers | Unnatural Death: A Lord Peter Wimsey Mystery |  
  | 
						
							|  | HarperCollins, 2014 (1927) | Hardcover, Softcover, Paperback, CD, e-Book | 
							| When the wealthy old woman died suddenly, sooner than the doctor expected, her death left a question in the minds of many people. Was it a natural death or murder? (MS) | 
						| 
 | 
						
							|      | Dorothy L. Sayers | Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club: A Peter Wimsey Mystery |  
  | 
						
							|  | HarperCollins, 2014 (1928) | Hardcover, Softcover, Paperback, CD, e-Book | 
							| When Lord Peter Wimsey heads to his club for lunch, he doesn't expect to find a ninety-year-old General dead in one of the overstuffed armchairs. (MS) | 
						| 
 | 
						
							|      | Dorothy L. Sayers | Whose Body?: A Lord Peter Wimsey Mystery |  
  | 
						
							|  | HarperCollins, 2014 (1995) | Hardcover, Softcover, Paperback, CD, e-Book | 
							| Imagine entering your bathroom, looking forward to a long, hot soak and finding a corpse has gotten there first! (MS) | 
						| 
 | 
						
							|      | Steven Saylor | Dominus |  
  | 
						
							|  | St. Martin's, 2021 (2021) | Hardcover, e-Book | 
							| A sweeping view of the Roman Empire from AD 161 to 337. (BL) | 
						| 
 | 
						
							|      | Steven Saylor | The Triumph of Caesar: A Novel of Ancient Rome |  
  | 
						
							|  | Minotaur, 2008 (2008) | Hardcover | 
							| An invisible malady seems to plague Rome, specific and growing dangers await the triumphant Julius Caesar, and only Gordianus can help ancient Rome avert a seemingly inevitable disaster. (TD) |