A hodge-podge of words and pictures that range from so caliginous a night to an imagined beast and its haunts.
Showing posts with label Agatha Christie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Agatha Christie. Show all posts
Monday, October 21, 2013
A Series of Four or Five
The "Tommy and Tuppence" series is one of my very favorites from Agatha Christie (affectionately known as the Queen of Crime). They occur in "The Secret Adversary", a 1922 novel, "Partners in Crime", a sort of short story collection, "N or M?" an espionage adventure, "By the Pricking of My Thumbs", a post-WWII novel, and their last, "Postern of Fate". They are Christie's only detectives that age with the novels, and that in itself is a marvelous feat. They solve crimes from their twenties to their sixties, and are marvelous in each endeavor!
Monday, May 6, 2013
A Valid Point
I must point out that I have always quite thought I have known who the murderer is in any Agatha Christie novel, only to find that it is someone else entirely, and that Miss Marple knew all along.
With ever so much love,
the eclectic authoress herself
With ever so much love,
the eclectic authoress herself
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Whodunit This Time?
Agatha Christie is the one and only Queen of Crime. Her stories range from "The Mysterious Affair At Styles", her first- introducing mustachioed Belgian detective Hercule Poirot- to "Curtain", her last- and this detective's final case. In between, however, the Poirot's and Miss Marple's, are stories narrated by someone who appears in one book only. "The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" is one of these, and it is one that the eclectic authoress recommends wholeheartedly. The narrator is a humble village doctor called to the scene of a murder- and then discovers his next-door neighbor is Poirot, famous detective. The two compare notes about the murder, and the solution leaves the reader wondering: Did that actually happen?
Sunday, March 31, 2013
A Beautiful Ending
"'No, I don't think I do, really... I just thought I did. But he didn't believe in me. He didn't know I was innocent.' She looked at Calgary. 'You knew! I think I'd like to marry you.'
'But, Hester, I'm years older than you are. You can't really-'
'That is- if you want me,' said Hester with sudden doubt.
'Oh, I want you!' said Arthur Calgary."
(This perfect scene- which makes much more sense and is much more beautiful if one has read Ordeal By Innocence by Agatha Christie- ends a fantastic book by having dynamic characters do dynamic things, and shows that even relatives and friends being murdered can bring people together. Let us all hope it does not come to that outside of literature.)
'But, Hester, I'm years older than you are. You can't really-'
'That is- if you want me,' said Hester with sudden doubt.
'Oh, I want you!' said Arthur Calgary."
(This perfect scene- which makes much more sense and is much more beautiful if one has read Ordeal By Innocence by Agatha Christie- ends a fantastic book by having dynamic characters do dynamic things, and shows that even relatives and friends being murdered can bring people together. Let us all hope it does not come to that outside of literature.)
Saturday, March 30, 2013
The Good Doctor
"The Murder of Roger Achroyd", by Agatha Christie, is without a doubt the strangest mystery I have ever read. I cannot spoil the ending for my dear readers, but I do promise them that no matter how smart they believe they are, they will not guess the murderer correctly.
Best of luck,
The eclectic authoress herself
Best of luck,
The eclectic authoress herself
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)


