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Showing posts with the label miss marple

“Sleeping Murder” by Agatha Christie – Ghosts of a Perfect Crime

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Sadly, even fictional characters must one day meet an end, but it is always more inspiring when it happens at the hands of their makers, something Agatha Christie understood rather well, having penned the final acts for both Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot many years before retiring them. She gave it all to bid them a worthy farewell, and it was most certainly enough, at least in Miss Marple's case as she was called upon to solve the perfect assassination in Sleeping Murder .

“Nemesis” by Agatha Christie – Postmortem Guidance

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There are only so many ways to diversify the concept of a murder investigation, but Agatha Christie never relented and virtually always managed to bring something new and interesting to the table. In her Miss Marple series she experimented from time to time, diverging from the classical whodunit formula we've come to expect from, and more often than not the results were rather pleasing, if not interesting at the very least.

“At Bertram's Hotel” by Agatha Christie – Miss Marple the Witness

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Literature may not be subjected to our laws of reality (as a matter of fact, it couldn't be more removed from them), we still strive to maintain a semblance of realism, even if it is to the disappointment of the fans. More often than not, in a book series characters do grow older and older, though at the author's convenience. Still, sometimes it is impossible to keep our most beloved protagonists young and spry, especially when they were already older to start with, as was Miss Marple.

“A Caribbean Mystery” by Agatha Christie – A Murder Fit for a Vacation

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Jane Marple may very well have one of the sharpest minds in the universe, but the fact remains that she is still subjected to the toll taken by old age and cannot escape its wrath. Just like everyone else, miss Marple is in need of a vacation, and in A Caribbean Mystery that is just what the doctor prescribed... literally. Jane finds herself sent to a paradise vacation island by her nephew Raymond, and everything is so still and perfect that she finds herself bored to death.

“The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side” by Agatha Christie – Changing with the Times

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Very few are those who would expect to see their grand criminal mastermind plans fall apart at the intrusion of an old lady, and yet it is a feat that Miss Marple has been able to accomplish time and time again, visibly toughened into iron by all the horrors she must have witnessed ever since her retirement began. In The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side by Agatha Christie she is at it again, as the author now takes us back to St. Mary's Mead, Miss Marple's own quaint little village, albeit one that has changed considerably since her last visit.

“4:50 From Paddington” by Agatha Christie – The Unlikely Witness

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Agatha Christie has for long been known as the indisputable master of murder mystery novels, always being capable of delivering a solid plot that drags the reader along exactly where it wants to, keeping them oblivious to the clues under their noses and leading to the unexpected unveiling of the criminal nobody even suspected. Though she did tend to follow certain archetypes or had similar settings from one story to the next, there always managed to be that high-class uniqueness to it all, as can be perfectly seen with 4:50 From Paddington , a Miss Marple mystery.

“A Pocket Full of Rye” by Agatha Christie – Rhymes from the Dark Past

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When we think about the many trials and tribulations faced by some of our favorite recurring characters in literature, one of the most obvious ones we don't think about is just how much terror and death they have witnessed without letting it touch them. Perhaps Miss Marple is the epitome of iron old ladies, being capable of making it from one end of the English countryside to the next without going mad from witnessing swarms of stabbings, poisonings, hangings, and “accidents”.

“They Do It with Mirrors” by Agatha Christie – Ultimate Delinquency

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Agatha Christie has had such a prolific and illustrious career that a large number of novels have made it into the “classics of literature” category, which in turn, unfortunately, overshadowed many other stories which, perhaps not being as good, still remain fantastic and for the most part, largely better than what has been printed since. They Do it with Mirrors is one such Agatha Christie novel, and it follows Miss Marple as she is beckoned by an old friend, Ruth Van Rydock, to go visit her sister, Carrie Louise Martin, at her family home (well, more like family mansion) and shed light on some strange happenings that have been bothering that latter one.

“A Murder is Announced” by Agatha Christie – An Honest Kill

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Agatha Christie has gifted the world of literature with countless mysteries which eventually paved the way for a number of prolific writers, and the character of Jane Marple is one that has often been imitated, but never successfully replicated by any others. Having her own series of British countryside crimes to solve, she often finds herself thrust deep into the middle of deceptively complicated and morbid affairs, as is the case in one of her most well-known books, A Murder is Announced .

“The Moving Finger” by Agatha Christie – Lethal Shame

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Dark secrets are seldom hidden away forever in literature; rather, they are locked in a Pandora's Box to be opened at the most convenient time. As one might expect, the British countryside is practically made of and built upon dark secrets, or at least that's the case in Agatha Christie's The Moving Finger , which it should be noted, was actually one of her personal favorite works of her own, and in her eyes it is one of the few that truly stood the test of time.

“The Body in the Library” by Agatha Christie – Deadly British Countryside

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If Agatha Christie is to be believed, then the most dangerous place on Earth to live in is the British countryside. Populated by lovely retired folks and wealthy families, it seems to be a secret war zone where polite murder is part of the daily curriculum. Fortunately, this kind of set-up has given writers such as the afore-mentioned godmother of whodunit mysteries the perfect fodder to craft one timeless novel after the next, as was the case with The Body in the Library .

“The Murder at the Vicarage” by Agatha Christie – Marple's Debut

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Though Agatha Christie has certainly gained untold levels of notoriety for her stories featuring the unforgettable Belgian detective, Hercule Poirot , it is sometimes easy to forget that somewhere down the line, she created a sort of counterpart: Miss Marple. A lovely aged lady, Miss Marple is rather gifted when it comes to powers of deduction, and often unwittingly finds herself in the middle of quite morbid affairs which call upon her specific talents.