With 80 crime novels and story collections to her name, it’s perhaps unsurprising that Agatha Christie had quite a few repeating characters to call upon: Hercule Poirot, Jane Marple, Tommy and Tuppence Beresford, and Superintendent Battle all got to be the focus of several books. Ariadne Oliver, Colonel Johnny Race, and Mr. Satterthwaite cropped up a few times each, as arguably did James Parker Pyne and Mr. Harley Quinn through their short stories. But then what about the others, the one-offs, those sleuths who strutted and fretted their hour upon the stage and then were heard no more? What immortality do they get? Well, since you ask…





Death Comes As The End and Crooked House are definitely favourites of mine. Two other Christie novels which don’t contain serial sleuths, which I would definitely recommend are Endless Night (1967) and Ordeal by Innocence (1958). I didn’t enjoy Murder is Easy as much (which I reviewed this July) simply because Luke Fitzwilliam is a rather poor detective who has to bump into the murderer to find them. I think there is a definite lack of fresh clues and trails for Luke to follow, which makes the story a bit slow at times. But I do agree I do like the way it opens on the train.
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Have yet to get to Endless Night; working through Christie chronologically, so will be there in a couple of books. Ordeal by Innocence, I’ll be honest, I found a bit of a chore. Had it not been by one of my favourite authors, I’d have skipped quite a few bits. Some great ideas, and a moment of wonderful clewing at the end, but too much conversation and not enough action for my tastes.
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I wasn’t so disciplined when I read Christie’s novels. I tended to dot about between the decades.
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I decided fairly early on that, if I was going to read that many books by an author, I needed to keep track somehow and so ‘in order’ seemed the surest way. Have tried doing the same thing with John Dickson Carr but, due to his inexplicable unavailability, that’s rather a harder task…
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Yes I can definitely imagine with Carr that would be difficult. Someone such as Sayers, Marsh or Allingham I think it would be more possible. Possibly Patricia Wentworth as well. Think Gladys Mitchell might also be a tricky author to read chronologically, as she wrote an awful lot.
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The main difficulty with reading Mitchell in order is that her books are terrible!
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Mitchell is indeed awful. I dislike Mrs Bradley very much indeed.
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Music to my ears!
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haha, yeah I would say her writing is very mixed especially the later on she got into her career. I’ve read a few of them and I think Speedy Death and The Saltmarsh Murders (both very early ones) are probably two of her best and are actually very good reads.
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Oh, god. If Saltmarsh Murders is one of her best then count me out! That is easily one of the five worst books I’ve read in the last five years. Thank-you so much for the time you have just saved me!
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Thank you for adding this to the Agatha Christie Reading Challenge Blog Carnival http://acrccarnival.blogspot.com.au/
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Not at all, thank-you for setting it up; it’s a great idea, I shall check in often and contribute where I can.
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Funny story about Murder Is Easy: I solved it while reading a forum discussion on it, and someone commented (when they were early in the book) in short, “Wouldn’t it be funny if X was the killer?”
Me(near the end): “Yep! That would be funny! Hahahahaha…
Hah.
Hah.
…
Oh.”
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Learned that lesson the hard way, too, after the first question on an author’s website FAQ was “Why did you kill X?” and X was the main character in the trilogy I was about to start.
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Heh, not that bad. It was a read-through, and they were honestly speculating. It’s just that they got me thinking about someone, and about how well they fit. Still a good killer though.
(Also, really random author?)
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Oh, yeah, a very random author. This was a YA trilogy I was given about 15 years ago, back when that kind of behaviour was permissable on the interest. Still, lesson learned!
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Back with a question: Could you go into more detail on Crooked House’s influence? I’m already spoiled on it (<.<) and that claim is too interesting to pass up. (No really, this stuff is interesting to me.)
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Gladly, but don’t want to spoil it in public for anyone else not yet savvy to its solution. Are you happy for me to email you some thoughts?
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Hmmm, on the one hand, discussion of the genre’s history. On the other, giving out my e-mail address. On the other other hand, as the owner if this blog, you might already have it from my comment. 😛 Sure. If you don’t have it, then tell me how to send it your way. I do have one other question though: Didn’t Ellery Queen do this first?
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I do indeed have it, so you’re safe from publicising it to all and sundry. Shall email you ovber the weekend. Am also not aware of the EQ you’re referring to, so I may just be about to be taught an important lesson…!
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