| and damn, nobody did it better. |
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Yes, I reread old favorites regularly. I have a few Agatha Christies I like, some Terry Pratchett, and Emma (the best Jane Austen, IMO).
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| ^ and LOTR, of course. |
| Margaret Yorke has some good ones. The Ellis Peters Brother Cadfael series is good. |
Dorothy Sayers did it better! But the Agatha Christie’s are a lovely read anyway |
| I went through a huge Agatha Christie phase when I was younger, but haven’t read her in years. I was more a fan of Hercule Poirot and his little gray cells than Miss Marple, though. |
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Love all Agatha Christie.
Endless Night didn’t feature Poirot or Marple, different than her others, but I loved it just the same. Had a haunting quality to it, but I guess that speaks for many of her books. She also wrote some short stories. One featured a character known as “the gunman” and I’ve been meaning to track it down— had the same haunting quality to it. |
Ten Little ****ers Whoops Ten Little Indians Whoops again And Then There Were None Okay, that ought to do it. |
| I would recommend the biography of Christie by Lucy Worsley. |
The Miss Marple TV shows are good. They convey have much she gets away with due to being treated like an invisible old woman. |
The audiobook of Endless Night is great for a road trip. |
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I've been rereading them too, though I also prefer Hercule Poirot.
I think they are classics and I love them even when they are not great. Sometimes the mysteries are SO convoluted and rely on so much happening. Look at Death on the Nile - the killers plotted this extremely complicated murder, and everything had to go exactly. But they were seen by the maid, so killer #2 had to kill the maid in close range with a knife and get away with hiding the body and not being discovered. Then, for body #3, the first killer had to speak loudly enough for killer 2 to hear, run and get a gun, stick it into the room and kind of blindly shoot the woman who was about to reveal what she saw. THEN, once caught, killer 2 kills killer 1 and then kills herself. The whole thing is bizarre when you look at it objectively. |
I was about to post the exact same thing! |
| 19:59 again. And Christie got the idea for Miss Marple from a Sayers character called Miss Climpson! |
| I think Christie's seem less convoluted after you read Sayers or Allingham. I re-read Christie during busy times at work - so probably 5 or 6 a year. I just re-read the ones with Ariadne Oliver this year and appreciated the humor in them much more reading them now. |