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The Thirteen Problems

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574:. The doctor was living there for his health, and one night, in the principal hotel of the town, he caught sight of two middle-aged ladies, one slightly plump, one somewhat scraggy, whom he found out from a perusal of the hotel register were called Miss Mary Barton and Miss Amy Durrant, and who were tourists from England. The very next day, Dr Lloyd travelled to the other side of the island with friends for a picnic and, reaching the bay of Las Nieves, the group came upon the end of a tragedy: Miss Durrant had been swimming and got into trouble, and Miss Barton swam out to help her but to no avail; the other woman drowned. As part of the ensuing investigation, Miss Barton revealed that Miss Durrant was her companion of some five months. Dr Lloyd was puzzled by the claim made by one of the witnesses who swore that she saw Miss Barton holding Miss Durant's head under the water, not helping her, but the claim was dismissed as none of the other witnesses backed up the story. Dr Lloyd helped Miss Barton attempt to trace next-of-kin, but without success, and he also helped arrange the funeral, which took place on the island. Before she left Gran Canaria ten days later, Miss Barton asked Dr Lloyd several strange questions regarding the justification of taking the law into one's own hands. Miss Marple is interested to know if Miss Barton suddenly put on weight during this period and the doctor confirms that she had done so. 383:
canvas she overheard the conversation of the three people, and Denis's suggestion of hiring a rowboat to take them round the coast to a local cave. Carol, disliking boats, agreed to walk to the spot and meet the couple there. That afternoon Joyce had returned to her canvas in front of the pub, spotted two bathing suits drying in the sun from the balcony of the pub, and assumed that the three people had returned. A local man engaged her in somewhat unwanted conversation and distracted her from her work. Before she realised what she had done, she seemed to have painted in bloodstains on the pavement in front of the pub, and was astonished to find that she had captured reality – there did seem to be bloodstains on the pavement that were not there a short time before. Before she could take any action, Denis emerged from the pub and asked Joyce and the local man if they had seen Carol return. The three had met at the cave, as agreed, and Carol had supposedly walked back to Rathole but not arrived, although her car was still there. Denis and Margery drove off and Joyce inspected the pavement – only to find the bloodstains gone. Two days later, she read in the paper that Margery had disappeared while bathing in the sea, and a week later her body was found washed up with a blow to the head, supposedly caused when she dived into the water on some rocks.
766:. She was an actress called Mary Kerr, the wife of another actor, called Claude Leeson (although Jane admits these are not the people's real names). Someone calling herself Miss Kerr had rung up the police, told them the bungalow had been burgled, and described Leslie Faulkener as having visited there earlier that day, but having been refused admittance. He was later seen by a maid as gaining entrance through a window to steal Miss Kerr's jewellery. The police did indeed find the bungalow rifled and a large quantity of jewels missing. Miss Kerr soon returned but denied any knowledge of the affair or even of having rung up the police. Both she and the maid had been summoned away for the day on separate false pretexts and had never been in the bungalow when Mr Faulkener visited (whether by invitation or not). When Jane was brought face to face with Faulkener at the police station, he stated that this was not the woman he met at the bungalow, and the note was proven not to be in Jane's handwriting. Faulkener was released through lack of evidence. Sir Herman tried to hush the matter up but failed, and his wife started divorce proceedings when she found out about the affair with the actress. 357:, where he immediately felt suspicious of the landlord, Mr Kelvin, who made meaningful comments about the police and other "foreigners" looking into local matters. The next day, Sunday, saw a storm brewing over the area, and this coincided with Raymond having a feeling of foreboding. This feeling was justified when Newman went out for a walk that night and failed to return, although his disappearance was not noticed until the following day. A search was set up and the missing man was found bound and gagged in a local ditch. His story was that he spotted some men bringing something onto a beach by boat in a local spot appropriately called "Smuggler's Cove" and then putting the cargo into a local cave. The men set upon him, bound him and drove him to the ditch in a lorry. Badgworth found evidence that the cave had been used to store something but, more importantly, tyre tracks on the route on which Newman was taken matched a tyre on a lorry owned by Mr Kelvin. A night nurse of a neighbour testified the lorry was never taken out of its garage on the night in question. Kelvin evaded arrest and Raymond didn't know the solution to the mystery. 690:
asked the police to try the discarded hat on the dead woman's head – it didn't fit. She realised that the body they saw and quickly locked in the room when they first discovered it was not that of Mrs Sanders, but that of the dead housemaid, which was awaiting collection by the undertakers. Sanders had put the body there when his wife was playing bridge, and then rushed into the grounds after the "discovery", supposedly overcome with grief. There he had met his wife returning from the game, summoned by him on the telephone using an alias, somehow persuaded her up to their room by means of the fire escape, killed her, and then swapped the clothes, returning the dead housemaid to her room. The one thing he couldn't do was put the hat back on his wife's head, as her shingled hair meant it didn't fit. The cheap hat they found was the property of the housemaid, as Mrs Sanders's hat cupboard was locked when her husband was placing the dead girl in his room, and a hat was needed to cover the face. Mr Sanders was hanged for his wife's murder.
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where they would easily have stood out and been spotted, therefore one of the four must be guilty. One puzzle is how the killer received his or her instructions. The only people to come to the house that day were the butcher, the grocer's assistant, and the postman. The latter brought several letters for various members of the house, including a gardening catalogue and a letter for Charles Templeton which appeared to have been sent from relatives in Germany. Templeton ripped it up and threw it away. Of the letters the police were able to examine, the strangest was one addressed to Dr Rosen himself which was from someone called "Georgine" and mentioned several people of whom Rosen had never heard. Sir Henry shows the group the letter and Miss Marple wonders why the word "Honesty", which appears in the middle of a sentence, is written with a capital H.
589:, in fact, Miss Durrant. Two tourists would not have been known to anyone, and no one realised who was the employer and who was the companion in Gran Canaria. The two women were cousins. Miss Durrant was the eldest of nine children in desperate straits, with some suffering ill-health. They wrote to their relative in England for help, but she refused due to a family quarrel from years earlier. Miss Durrant travelled to England under this assumed name and found employment with Miss Barton, whom she then killed and whose guise she adopted in Gran Canaria. Faking her death in Cornwall, she and her siblings inherited her money as next-of-kin. Dr Lloyd met with the Durrant family and realised the harm he would cause them by reporting their elder sister to the police for a crime for which he had little evidence. Six months later, Miss Durrant died. 463:
later he died, and Miss Marple wrote to offer to stay with her niece for a while, but received a reply back that politely refused the offer. Three months later a second letter was sent to her aunt hysterically begging her to come. Arriving at her niece's house, which Mabel shared with two servants – hers and a nursemaid for her mentally-ill father-in-law – Miss Marple learned that the widow was the subject of gossip to the effect that she had murdered her husband, and no one in the area would now talk to her. Geoffrey had been taken ill in the night and died soon after the doctor arrived, but the old locum had not raised the alarm about the manner of death. It was thought that he had died after eating poisoned mushrooms. The two servants told Miss Marple that Denman had been unable to swallow and was rambling before he died about fish. An
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heading towards the grove. The others followed and found her in her true costume, magnificently adorned in the moonlight as a priestess of Astarte. She warned the others not to approach but Sir Richard did and promptly collapsed on the ground. When he was examined by his cousin, Elliot, and then Dr Symonds, they found he was dead, killed by a stab to the heart, but no one was seen to approach him and no weapon was found on the grassy floor. They took the body into the house and the police were called. Not satisfied, Elliot went back alone to the grove to investigate further and later the others found him struck down in the same spot with a knife wound in his shoulder and the knife in his hand. His story was one of seeing an illusion of the goddess and then being struck down himself. The knife was identified as one dug up from a
876:(8 September 1932) stated, "It is easy to invent an improbable detective, like this elderly spinster who has spent all her life in one village, but by no means so easy to make her detections plausible. Sometimes Miss Marple comes dangerously near those detectives with a remarkable and almost superhuman intuition who solve every mystery as if they knew the answer beforehand, but this is not often and Mrs. Christie shows great skill in adapting her problems so that she can find analogies in Miss Marple's surroundings." The review concluded that "in general these are all problems to try the intellect rather than the nerves of the reader." 391:
woman, supposedly Denis's new wife. Although she didn't know exactly what was happening, Joyce went to the police station and reported suspicious activity. A Scotland Yard inspector was already there investigating Denis who, under several names, had married women, insured their lives for large sums, and then killed them in a conspiracy with Carol – his real wife. The woman Joyce saw in Rathole at the time that the bloodstains were on the pavement wasn't Margery but Carol in disguise. When they killed the real Margery during the trip to the cave, blood must have got onto the scarlet bathing suit.
439:. During this period, Petherick left his overcoat where only Mrs Spragg could have gained access to the envelope with the will in it. Petherick took it to his office where he was soon visited by Mr Spragg, who was left alone with the will for a few moments. Two months later, Clode died. When the will was opened, the sheet was blank. Petherick's problem was that Mrs Spragg had the opportunity to change the will, but the will was already in her favour, so she had the opportunity but no motive. George had the motive but no opportunity, as when he had access to the will Mr Petherick was present. 1336:, on their dig in 1930 when she returned there, having formed a somewhat fragile relationship with the Woolleys. Max and Agatha's romance required very careful handling as far as the Woolleys were concerned, as they could easily have damaged Max's career. They accepted the news of the engagement, but made Max work to the last moment before the wedding, and refused to allow Agatha to travel with Max to the dig the first season after their marriage, as they had a rule that wives were not allowed. Fortunately, it was Max's last dig with the Woolleys. Christie refers to this incident in 682:
by a sandbag. Immediately suspicious, Miss Marple refused to allow the husband to touch the body, and insisted the door be locked and the police called. Miss Marple noticed the woman's hat was lying beside the body, although previously she had been wearing it. Prompted by the police, she also noticed that the dead woman was no longer wearing earrings, as she had been when the body was first discovered. Mrs Sanders's other jewellery was missing, and the police were certain the thief came back after killing the woman and gained entry by means of the
256:– the artist Joyce LempriΓ¨re, Sir Henry Clithering (a former Scotland Yard commissioner), a clergyman called Dr Pender, and Mr Petherick, a solicitor. The conversation turns to unsolved mysteries; Raymond, Joyce, Pender, and Petherick all claim that their professions are ideal for solving crimes. Joyce suggests that they form a club; every Tuesday night, a member of the group must tell of a real mystery, and the others will attempt to solve it. Sir Henry agrees to participate, and Miss Marple brightly volunteers herself to round out the group. 432:"Simon Clode" threw Philip out of the house in a fit of anger. The old man then fell ill and was near death. He instructed Petherick to attend him to draw up a new will leaving five thousand pounds to each of his nieces and nephews and the greater part to the Spraggs. As the old man lay in his bed, Petherick tried to dissuade Clode against the terms of the new will but to no avail. Two servants were summoned and instructed to fetch a pen and witness the new will, which Clode wrote out himself and gave to Petherick for safekeeping. 737:. He planted the foxglove seed among the sage a long time before, and mild poisoning ensued at the dinner party, but somehow he fed his ward further doses at the same time from his own drug, thereby killing her but making it look like an accident. The motive was jealousy – he was in love with his ward and determined that she wouldn't marry Lorimer. Mrs Bantry confirms that she received a letter from Sir Ambrose after he died, to be posted to her in the event of his death, in which he confessed to the crime. 506:
wonders if the old lady could solve a ghost mystery of Arthur's. Miss Marple duly arrives at the Bantry home along with Sir Henry, an actress called Jane Helier, and Dr Lloyd. Arthur Bantry tells of a friend, George Pritchard, whose late wife was a difficult and cantankerous semi-invalid looked after by a succession of nurses. They changed regularly, unable to cope with their patient, with one exception called Nurse Copling who somehow managed the tantrums and complaints better than others of her calling.
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traveller; a maid in one of the hotels in which he stayed saw blotting paper he had used to write a letter, whose decipherable phrases referred to his dependency on his wife's money, her death, and "hundreds and thousands". The maid read of the death in a paper and, knowing relatives in the same village where Mr and Mrs Jones lived, wrote to them. This started a chain of gossip which led to the exhumation of the body and the discovery that Mrs Jones was poisoned with
3461: 2264: 1328:. The situation was further unusual in that Katharine was not a woman that other women found easy to get on with. Incredibly self-centred and difficult, she preferred to surround herself with men whom she then expected would accede to her demands and whims, such as brushing her hair or walking miles to purchase her favourite confectionery, which she would then eat in one sitting, making her sick. She was described by 800:. He definitely thinks Sandford is the murderer. They call on the architect, who confesses that he is the father of the unborn child and that he wrote a note to Rose, suggesting a meeting at the river, when she insisted on speaking with him. He walked through the woods near the river but failed to keep the appointment. He is told that he is the prime suspect in the case, and not to leave his house. 578:
called Mrs Trout, who claimed several dead people's old age pensions, states that "Miss Barton" was a clever criminal who drowned the other woman and then assumed her identity – hence the reason she looked fat – she was simply wearing the other person's clothes. The really significant fact was that the body in Cornwall was never found – this was another part of the deception.
283:. Miss Clark had not eaten the dessert (due to her diet) and Mr Jones scraped off the poisoned sweets. Sir Henry confirms that Miss Marple is correct. Mr Jones had got Gladys pregnant and used a promise of marriage after his wife's death to persuade the girl to commit murder. He then married someone else. The baby died shortly after its birth and Gladys confessed while dying. 497:. He emptied his eye solution into his son's bedside glass of water knowing Geoffrey would drink it during the night. Mr Denman is committed to an asylum after all and the Tuesday Club congratulates Miss Marple on her success, although Raymond points out there is one thing she doesn't know. His aunt corrects him – she knows that he proposed to Joyce earlier in the evening! 885:(5 March 1933) wrote: "The stories are slight in structure, but they present some very pretty problems and introduce us to some truly interesting people. Miss Marple ... is in a class by herself. She does not call herself a detective, but she could give almost any of the regular sleuths cards and spades and beat him at his own game." 829:, Raymond West's future spouse is named as Joyce LempriΓ¨re, but in later works involving Miss Marple, Joyce is rechristened Joan. Similarly, a guest at the Bantry's household, Doctor Lloyd, is a general practitioner in St Mary Mead as opposed to the later physician, Doctor Haydock. The change in names is unexplained. 721:, Sir Ambrose had given in. Also there was Maud Wye, supposedly a friend of Jerry, but Mrs Bantry had seen Jerry kissing her one evening. Six months after Sylvia's death, the two were married. Dr Lloyd is puzzled as a fatal poisoning by the use of foxglove leaves – if it was an accident – is difficult to achieve; the 804:
shelves in Mrs Bartlett's kitchen and she can provide his alibi. At Sir Henry's insistence, they interview the small boy who heard the cry from Rose before she entered the water. He saw Sandford in the woods and thinks he also heard Joe Ellis whistling. He definitely saw two men with what seemed to be a
610:, expecting he might be murdered. His household comprised his niece Greta; an old servant, Gertrud; a local gardener Dobbs; and Dr Rosen's secretary, Charles Templeton, whom Clithering reveals was one of his own men, put in the house to keep an eye on things (but possibly not totally above suspicion). 816:
Sir Henry goes back to Mrs Bartlett's where Joe confesses to being in the woods, but denies hurting Rose. He then confronts Mrs Bartlett to the effect that she too was in the woods near the river. The "wheelbarrow" that was seen was the pram with the washing, and it was Mrs Bartlett who threw Rose in
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To wrap matters up, the three men visit the cottage of a widow, Mrs Bartlett, who has a young lodger, Joe Ellis, staying with her. This young man was besotted with Rose, and he states that he would have married Rose and brought up the baby as his own. At the time of the murder, he was putting up some
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Later in the morning, Sir Henry receives a visit from an upset Miss Marple who tells him that Rose was murdered, and she doesn't want the wrong man to be hanged for the crime. She tells him that while she believes she knows who the murderer is, she has no proof whatsoever. She asks him to investigate
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The guests of the Bantrys try to guess the solution but fail, and are annoyed when Jane claims she does not know the true solution herself. The group disperse for the night, their six stories told, and Miss Marple whispers something in Jane's ear that causes the actress to cry out in shock. Later she
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Jane Helier, the beautiful but somewhat vacuous actress, is the last to tell a story. Although she attempts to disguise the fact somewhat by using a false name, the others quickly realise that the story is about herself and, slipping up several times, she soon gives up the pretence and continues. She
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Mrs Sanders had been summoned back to the hydro from her bridge game by a mysterious telephone call, but her husband had a perfect alibi for the time in question, that is after she had left the bridge game but before the discovery of the body. It took Miss Marple two days to guess the truth; she then
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with friends, and early in the evening Mr Sanders returned from a trip out with two of his friends and asked Miss Marple and the other ladies' opinions on an evening bag that he'd bought for his wife as a Christmas present. They went up to his room and saw the body of Mrs Sanders on the floor, felled
454:). Petherick confirms that Philip confessed as much in a guarded conversation they had had a month later. The house servants were told which pen to fetch for Simon Clode if it looked like he was going to be signing a legal form, and they complied. The three children gained their rightful inheritance. 431:
Alarmed by this, Mr Petherick visited his client and then suggested to Grace's husband, Philip, that a noted professor on the subject of spiritualism be invited to the house to witness the sΓ©ances. This happened, with the result that the professor stated that the Spraggs were frauds. At hearing this,
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for the theft of gold from a London strongroom. He used the wreck and smuggling story to cover his tracks and Kelvin was set up as a scapegoat. The landlord's lorry was never used, but a tyre was taken off it during the night and put on another lorry to provide the "evidence". Newman's accomplice was
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just before Christmas. Feeling that older and more experienced people's feelings and intuitions are too often easily dismissed when such feelings are based on facts and experience, she relates how, when she saw a couple called Jack and Gladys Sanders together, she just knew that the husband meant to
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means death." Four days later, one of the primroses in the pattern of the wallpaper in Mrs Pritchard's room changed colour to blue in the middle of the night, when there had been a full moon. A month went by with Mrs Pritchard counting down the days to the next full moon. Sure enough, the same thing
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and had bought the salvage rights to a shipwreck from the Armada which sank off the coast and eluded many attempts at recovery over the years. Travelling by train to Newman's house in the village of Polperran, Raymond shared a carriage with Police Inspector Badgworth who knew of the Spanish treasure
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and a young man called Leslie Faulkener had been arrested. His story was that he was an unsuccessful playwright and had sent one of his efforts to Jane to read. She had written to him to say that she liked it and inviting him to come down to the bungalow to discuss it. He had gone, been shown in by
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The tragedy occurred when Dr Rosen was found at the bottom of the stairs, possibly having fallen down, possibly having been pushed. The four people in the locked house were out at the time, but none can produce an alibi for the time of the death. In addition, no strangers were seen in the vicinity,
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A year has passed and Sir Henry Clithering is once again in St Mary Mead staying as a guest of Colonel Arthur Bantry and his wife, Dolly. Asked for suggestions as to a sixth person for dinner, he names Miss Marple and tells an incredulous Dolly of her success at solving last year's mysteries. Dolly
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The people in the room deliver their various theories as to who the murderer is, but neglect to ask Miss Marple, until Sir Henry politely points out the omission. Miss Marple witters on about a similar case involving a local family (to which Raymond cannot see any relevance) until she suddenly asks
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With some reluctance, Sir Henry meets Melchett and Inspector Drewitt, who is investigating the case. By now the police know that the girl did not commit suicide, as bruises have been found on her upper arm where she was grabbed before being thrown in the river, and a small boy walking in the woods
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and that, rearranged, they spell "Death". This was the instruction to kill Dr Rosen, and it was sent to the intended victim himself to divert suspicion from the assassin. Receiving a letter from someone he did not know, he would naturally give it to the other people at the breakfast table to read,
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Mrs Pritchard had a predilection for fortunetellers, and one day one who called herself Zarida came to the house when both George and Nurse Copling were out of the house on their separate business. Arriving back home, Mrs Pritchard told George that Zarida had declared the house to be "evil" and to
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on the pavement, dripping from one of the bathing suits, which was scarlet in colour. The criminals didn't realise that when they hung them up to dry. Joyce confirms her point and finishes the story: a year later, at an east coast resort, she saw the same set up again with Denis, Carol and another
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when two cars drew up within a couple of minutes of each other. The first contained a couple and the second a scarlet-dressed woman. The man in the couple, "Denis", recognised the lone woman as "Carol", an old friend, and introduced her to his somewhat plain wife, "Margery". As Joyce worked on her
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called "Silent Grove" which was newly purchased by Sir Richard Haydon, an old college friend of the doctor's. Dr Pender was invited to a house party there, where they were joined by seven other people including a striking society beauty named Diana Ashley. Sir Richard was much attracted to her, as
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Sir Henry tells the first story of three people who sat down to a supper after which all of them fell ill, supposedly of food poisoning, and one died as a result. The three people were a Mr and Mrs Jones and the wife's companion, Miss Clark, and it was Mrs Jones who died. Mr Jones was a commercial
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The final story to be told at the regular meeting of the Tuesday Club comes from Miss Marple herself. It concerns a niece of hers called Mabel who obstinately married Geoffrey Denman when she was twenty-two, despite Denman having a violent temper and a history of insanity in his family. Ten years
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The members of the Tuesday Club debate possible solutions between them but Miss Marple hits on the correct one: although she does not know what caused Sir Richard to stumble – possibly a trip over a tree root – it was his cousin Elliot who quickly stabbed him in the pretence of examining him. The
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is German for "Dahlia", and that dahlias are symbolic of "Treachery and Misrepresentation". Miss Marple predicts that Greta being associated with criminals will come to a miserable end; Miss Marple also recommends to Sir Henry that he write a letter to Gertrud explaining she has been cleared of
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Three months after the death of her uncle, Greta Rosen went back to Germany, but not before seeing Sir Henry and asking him to confirm that Charles was above suspicion. Sir Henry was unable to do so. Miss Marple and Mrs Bantry point out that the three people in the letter and the one place name,
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Some time later, Dr Lloyd read in the papers that Miss Barton drowned in Cornwall, although the body was never found. She left a suicide note which seemed to confess to some crime, and the inquest ruled that she was temporarily insane. Miss Marple, comparing the tale to that of a local fraudster
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admitting the crime and the torment he has suffered since. His motive was love for Diana Ashley, and by killing his cousin he both removed a rival and inherited his wealth. He hoped to atone for his crime and assuage his guilt by dying honourably, which the clergyman confirms he did. Although Dr
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Toned down to a fancy dress party, Diana's suggestion was accepted by the others to take place that night, and preparations happily took place. Diana's shapeless dress, titled 'the unknown', disappointed the group for its lack of imagination, and during the party she disappeared, last being seen
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that proved totally inconclusive. Miss Marple began to wonder if Geoffrey had committed suicide and used a knowledge of medicine gained in a previous period of his life to do so. Totally stumped by the problem, she was in the high street and in something of a silent prayer for guidance when she
543:, she was struck by how closely the solution resembled smelling salts. If such a solution had been substituted for the bottle Mrs Pritchard always kept by her, the cyanide would have killed her, but the gas would have covered the short-lived smell of almonds. The flowers on the wall were red 264:. There was further gossip linking Mr Jones to the doctor's daughter, but there was nothing substantive there. The Jones's maid, Gladys, tearfully confirmed that all three people had been served the same meal of tinned lobster, bread and cheese, and trifle. She had also prepared a bowl of 531:
beside her, a faint smell of gas in the room and a geranium on the wallpaper turned blue. There was gossip following the death and an exhumation, but no clear result. Moreover, Zarida had disappeared and no one could properly trace how Mrs Pritchard had come to hear of her.
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poisoning. Based on her own eyedrops, which contain atropine sulphate, she confronted the elderly Mr Denman and accused him of murdering his son. The insane man laughingly confessed the crime, committed because he overheard that his son was planning to put him in an
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to these three in equal shares. Grace married but lived nearby with her husband, Philip. George found employment in a bank, while Mary stayed behind to care for Simon. The old man still pined for his granddaughter and found himself under the influence of an American
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in the gathering dusk. Sir Henry, defeated in his attempt to clear Sandford, visits Miss Marple, who tells him Mrs Bartlett couldn't have been home on a Friday – the night in question. She takes in washing as extra income and on Fridays she takes it round in an old
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concocted the set-up. Miss Marple's warning was for Jane not to put herself at the mercy of the understudy, who may prove untrustworthy in the future. Jane decides not to proceed with the plan – there might be other Miss Marples out there who would find her out.
551:– in the true smelling salts turned blue. Nurse Copling, who was Zarida in disguise, was the killer, in the hopes (which did not come to pass) of marrying the widower Pritchard. Sir Henry confirms that Nurse Copling was recently arrested for a similar murder. 1374:
provided detective fiction with a new and distinctive character. Miss Marple, that delightfully clever village spinster who solves the most amazing mysteries quietly and unobtrusively from her chair by the fireside, appears in each of the stories comprising
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the money away and had done so in favour of her husband. Miss Marple's feelings were confirmed when she shared a tram ride with the couple and witnessed Mr Sanders "tripping" on the stairs onto his wife who then fell down, but was fortunately saved by the
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one being Charles, the secretary and natural suspect, but the other being his niece, the assassin. Her visit to Sir Henry to try and clear Charles's name was intended to have the opposite effect. Miss Marple also remembers, from her childhood German
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Again it is Miss Marple who hits on the solution, when she admonishes her nephew on his choice of friends, and Sir Henry confirms that he knows something of the case and that the old lady is right. Newman is not the man's real name and he is now in
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It was Sylvia herself who picked the foxglove leaves and Dr Lloyd wonders if the intended victim was Sir Ambrose, who was prescribed drugs for his heart condition. Miss Marple latches onto this clue and finds the solution – Sir Ambrose's drug was
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for her, just to see what he can make of it, and to attempt to discover if the person she suspects was involved or not. She writes the name of the suspect on a piece of paper and gives it to Sir Henry, who reads it and sets out to investigate.
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Some time has passed since the six people met at the Bantry home, and Sir Henry is once again a guest there when news reaches the house early one morning that a local girl called Rose Emmott has been found drowned in the river near to the
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Sir Henry Clithering tells his story, still a puzzle to him. There are four suspects, three of whom are therefore as much victims as the real victim in that they are under constant suspicion. It concerns a German secret society, the
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the water, as she herself was in love with Joe. Not wanting to see the young man hanged, she confesses, but is puzzled as to how Sir Henry knew. He recalls the note Miss Marple gave him, naming Mrs Bartlett as the murderer.
304:, in the centre of which he had built a rough temple in the form of a stone summerhouse. Diana Ashley was enthused enough by the grove and the structure it contained to wildly suggest a moonlit orgy to the goddess of the 268:
for Mrs Jones to calm her stomach, but Miss Clark ate this, despite the diet she was on for her consistent weight problems. Jones also had a plausible explanation for the letter which was blotted in the hotel room.
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Sir Henry Clithering invites Miss Marple to a dinner party, where the next set of six stories are told. The group of guests employ a similar guessing game, and once more Miss Marple triumphs. The thirteenth story,
207:, Christie employs an overarching narrative, making the book more like an episodic novel. There are three sets of narratives, though they themselves interrelate. The first set of six are stories told by the 29: 788:. Local gossip was that she was pregnant by a young man called Rex Sandford, who is an architect from London, and the local feeling now is that she killed herself, unable to face her father with the truth. 770:
confesses to Mrs Bantry that the story she told never happened, but Jane was thinking of carrying out such a scheme against an actress who enticed one of her previous husbands away from her. Jane and her
211:, a random gathering of people at the house of Miss Marple. Each week the group tell tales of mystery, always solved by the female amateur detective from the comfort of her armchair. One of the guests is 526:
Another month passed, with Nurse Copling and Pritchard growing increasingly nervous while Mrs Pritchard seems resigned. The morning after the next full moon, Mrs Pritchard was found dead in her bed, her
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Questioning the servants further, they stated that the words were to do with a "heap" or "pile" of some fish whose name probably began with "c". Checking a list of poisons, Miss Marple found one called
606:. Dr Rosen, prominent in secret service work, penetrated the organisation and managed to bring about its downfall. Despite this success, he was a marked man and came to England, living in a cottage in 239:
and asks him to help in the investigation surrounding the death of a local village girl. At the start of the story Miss Marple secretly works out who the murderer is and her solution proves correct.
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as "dangerous". Katharine's marriage to Leonard was a second marriage for her, her first husband having committed suicide within six months of the marriage in 1919. Christie met her second husband,
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The men in the Tuesday Club feel that there is very little in the story to go on, but Miss Marple points out that they do not appreciate the point about clothes as she and Joyce do. The bloodstains
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about the progress of the dig, she made a visit there and, unusually for the Woolleys, was made welcome. This special treatment was entirely due to Katharine's admiration for Christie's 1926 novel
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The group meets the following week and it is the turn of Dr Pender to tell his story. His tale is one in which a man was struck down by "no human agency". It took place at a house on the edge of
350:
had either been removed from the ship's strongroom after the hull had been torn open on the rocks of Serpent's Point, or stolen some time before. The Inspector was investigating the matter.
366:
probably his gardener whom Raymond saw working on a bed of rose trees on the Monday morning when they realised Newman was "missing" – as Miss Marple states, real gardeners never work on
308:, a suggestion which, unsurprisingly, was vetoed by Dr Pender and some of the others, part of their objection being a feeling of evil that the setting provoked in their imaginations. 908:: "Early Marple, in which she solves cases described by other amateur and professional murder buffs gathered in an ad hoc club. Some engaging stories, but the sedentary format (cf. 796:
nearby on the evening before heard her cry and found her body. Sir Henry joins the two policemen as they continue their investigations. They meet Rose's father who runs the village
407:
and left an orphaned granddaughter who in turn died when she was a child, leaving the old man bereft and grief-stricken. A brother of his had also recently died and
902:
of 13 June 1932 said, "The plots are so good that one marvels at the prodigality which has been displayed, as most of them would have made a full-length thriller."
698:
A reluctant Mrs Bantry is prevailed upon to take her turn. She relates how she and her husband were guests of Sir Ambrose Bercy at his house at Clodderham Court.
403:
Mr Petherick tells his story, which has a legal background. A client of his, whom he calls "Simon Clode", was a wealthy man who had one son who was killed in the
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on the moor, which was kept in Sir Richard's house. The police suspected Diana but had no proof or explanation as to how she could have committed the crime.
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has to be extracted with great care and Sir Henry latches onto the main problem of the case, namely: how do you ensure that only your victim dies if you
273:
Sir Henry if Gladys confessed, and says that she hopes Mr Jones will hang for what he made the poor girl do. The letter in the hotel room was to Gladys.
893:
of 6 June 1932 declared, "The stories are worthy alike of Mrs Christie's powers of invention, and of the 'Crime Club' series in which they are issued."
3083: 2059: 858: 710:. All of the people at dinner were ill but one of them – Sir Ambrose's ward, Sylvia Keene – died. The inquest heard that death was due to poisoning by 320:
knife was hidden as part of his fancy dress costume. Dr Pender confirms that five years later, Elliot wrote to him on the eve of an expedition to the
3034: 1401: 862:. Mr Petherick returns in the short story "Miss Marple Tells a Story", which is also included in "Miss Marple's Final Cases and Two Other Stories". 677:. Miss Marple dates the tragedy from when Mr Sanders overheard her and two other ladies talking about this latter death. His wife was out playing 435:
After this part of the business had been concluded, Petherick went downstairs for tea and to help George Clode with some matters to do with the
252:
A group of friends are meeting at the house of Miss Marple in St Mary Mead. As well as the old lady herself, there is her nephew – the writer
3254: 1102:
After eighteen months, the second sequence of stories appeared, in a slightly different order to the book collection, and un-illustrated, in
378:
Joyce Lemprière's story also takes place in Cornwall, in the picturesque village of Rathole. One morning, she was painting a picture of the
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Among the party was a young man called Jerry Lorimer who was engaged to Sylvia, to the opposition of Sir Ambrose; but, after a year of the
1304:(1880–1960), knighted in 1935, was a famous British archaeologist who was in the middle of several seasons excavating the ancient city of 2971: 1379:. Each story is a little masterpiece of detection, clever and ingenious, with just that added twist that only Agatha Christie can give. 203: 1431:, first aired 27 June 2010. The adaptation was considerably embellished from the short story, but still keeps to the core story line. 296:
were most of the other men in the party, and she bewitched them all in turn. On the moor outside the house were several relics of the
3090: 2300: 216: 1312:(1888–1945) met Christie in 1928. She was on a solo trip to the Middle East following the painful divorce from her first husband, 3104: 2798: 2325: 2233: 1966: 3055: 2043: 1691: 3485: 3328: 2228: 1844: 1731: 279:
refers to sweets sprinkled atop the dessert; Mr Jones had mixed arsenic with them and given them to Gladys to use for the
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The ladies are prevailed upon to tell a story, and Miss Marple relates a tale from a time when she was staying at Keston
510:
avoid blue flowers. Two days later a letter arrived from the fortuneteller that said, "Beware of the Full Moon. The Blue
755:. The next thing he knew, he was waking up by the roadside. He staggered along and was quickly picked up by the police. 3164: 3041: 2035: 1594: 3490: 3314: 3069: 1703: 1670: 1524: 1040: 1024: 918:
stories) becomes monotonous over the book length. Contains one of Christie's few excursions into the working class,
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Arriving in Cornwall, Raymond settled into Newman's house and the following day went with him to the local pub,
3383: 3375: 2532: 2330: 2173: 881: 223:, and this allows Christie to resolve the story, with him usually pointing out that the criminals were caught. 428:, in which "Simon Clode" 'contacted' his granddaughter, and the Spraggs were virtually resident in the house. 411:
three children, Grace, Mary and George – all grown-up by the time of the story – came to live with Simon. His
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and within the grounds of the house was a grove of trees which Sir Richard fancied was an authentic grove of
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was on tour in a provincial town when she was summoned to a police station. There had been a burglary at a
1167:
in November 1931, with illustrations by J.A. May. In the United States, the first six stories appeared in
3307: 3192: 2916: 2749: 2469: 2190: 1440: 1423: 1407: 1324: 950: 3293: 2937: 2497: 2238: 2149: 1910: 1370: 1055:) first appeared in the UK in monthly fiction magazines. The first sequence of six stories appeared in 655: 567: 560: 2930: 2455: 1837: 1104: 914: 872: 442:
Miss Marple again guesses the solution – the pen used to write out the will contained a solution of
3464: 3367: 3345: 3006: 2861: 2609: 2401: 2286: 1990: 1876: 1809: 1563: 1169: 1035:
2005, Marple Facsimile edition (Facsimile of 1932 UK first edition), 12 September 2005; Hardcover,
480:". She realised that the solution lay in the mysterious words uttered by Geoffrey as he lay dying. 337:
in Cornwall with a recent acquaintance called John Newman. He was something of an authority on the
333:
Raymond West takes his turn in telling a story. It took place two years earlier when Raymond spent
253: 178: 325:
Pender has disguised the names, Sir Henry has recognized the case and the persons involved in it.
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received its first true publication in the US in the January 1930 issue (Volume 31, Number 4) of
421: 28: 3171: 2999: 2978: 2868: 2854: 2672: 2588: 2462: 1801: 1446: 1342:(1935) and, even more pointedly, based the character of the doomed, unstable Louise Leidner in 1163: 645:
murder his wife. The motive was money; they were living off her income but could not touch the
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happened, with a hollyhock on the wallpaper changing colour, although the door was locked.
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in the fishmonger's window with its characteristic black spots known as the "thumb mark of
212: 185:. They are the earliest stories Christie wrote about Miss Marple. The main setting for the 182: 8: 3300: 3178: 3122: 3020: 2964: 2847: 2812: 2777: 2763: 2546: 2157: 2027: 1974: 1822: 1338: 844: 646: 342:
trove but was specifically interested in the more recent wreck of a ship called the RMS
3286: 3199: 3143: 3013: 2992: 2693: 2630: 2567: 2553: 2511: 2351: 1313: 1057: 703: 173:(7/6) and the US edition at $ 2.00. The thirteen stories feature the amateur detective 152: 119: 74: 3429: 3150: 2735: 2679: 2658: 2581: 2539: 2518: 1926: 1786: 1769: 1752: 1727: 1699: 1666: 1590: 1520: 1309: 1036: 1020: 706:
was growing among the sage, and it was also included in the stuffing for the meal of
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everyone, including yourself (assuming the murderer to be one of the house party)?
511: 451: 3435: 3417: 3220: 3213: 2889: 2882: 2875: 2396: 2366: 2309: 2210: 2082: 1998: 1853: 1301: 1264: 678: 404: 148: 42: 1061:– with illustrations for all the instalments by Gilbert Wilkinson – as follows: 559:"The Companion (short story)" redirects here. For the Norwegian fairy tale, see 3240: 3185: 2791: 2602: 2386: 2381: 2371: 2130: 1451: 1428: 1412: 905: 810: 759: 528: 436: 338: 1029:
1972, Greenway edition of collected works (William Collins), Hardcover, 222 pp
711: 3479: 3351: 3268: 3157: 2700: 2417: 1886: 1818:
Review of British Museum exhibit on Agatha Christie and archaeology 2001-2002
1364:
of the first edition (which is also repeated opposite the title page) reads:
1329: 1228:– first published in Volume 102, Number 4 on 7 July under its original title. 1009: 981: 602:, started after the war, with methods and objectives similar to those of the 236: 220: 190: 64: 702:
leaves were picked from the garden for dinner that night, but unfortunately
535:
Once again Miss Marple has the solution. Having once seen a gardener mixing
3441: 3423: 2665: 2574: 2356: 2106: 1333: 984:, Paperback, (Penguin number 929), 224 pp (under slightly revised title of 945: 898: 889: 797: 571: 544: 424:, Mrs Eurydice Spragg, and her husband, Absalom. Mrs Spragg conducted many 416: 347: 734: 2616: 2391: 2376: 1871: 1857: 1260: 1016: 805: 707: 699: 683: 485: 367: 265: 232: 186: 174: 1817: 1780: 1763: 1746: 1247:
in March 1930 (Volume 31, Number 6) under the slightly revised title of
1032:
1973, Greenway edition of collected works (Dodd Mead), Hardcover, 222 pp
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was later expanded and reworked into a full-length novel, published as
992: 971: 909: 771: 718: 674: 650: 464: 412: 321: 1219:– first published in Volume 102, Number 3 on 30 June under the title 1210:– first published in Volume 102, Number 2 on 23 June under the title 1200:– first published in Volume 102, Number 1 on 16 June under the title 999: 785: 666: 624: 582: 515: 477: 297: 274: 166: 1190:– first published in Volume 101, Number 6 on 9 June under the title 1180:– first published in Volume 101, Number 5 on 2 June under the title 425: 2637: 752: 747: 722: 641: 607: 548: 519: 489: 292: 2278: 1251:. These three instalments were illustrated by De Alton Valentine. 1255:
short story received its first book publication in the anthology
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The atmosphere of on-coming tragedy was heightened when the hall
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as the detective; Miss Marple was not a character in the novel.
967:
1933, Dodd Mead and Company (New York), 1933, Hardcover, 253 pp
964:
1932, Collins Crime Club (London), June 1932, Hardcover, 256 pp
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Dr Lloyd confirms that he met the lady again coincidentally in
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Anime adaptations were done for three of these short stories (
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Five of these short stories have been adapted for television;
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Dr Lloyd is called upon to tell his story, and it begins in
670: 540: 305: 1852: 1477:) as episodes of the Japanese animated television series 1663:
A Talent to Deceive – an appreciation of Agatha Christie
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in the same year under the slightly amended title of
618:
together with the word "Honesty", are all species of
2183:
Agatha Christie's Great Detectives Poirot and Marple
1506:. Dragonby Press (Second Edition) March 1999 (p. 14) 1480:
Agatha Christie's Great Detectives Poirot and Marple
1173:
in 1928, with uncredited illustrations, as follows:
231:, takes place some time after the dinner party when 1519:: Second Edition (pp. 82, 87) Scholar Press. 1994; 1504:Collins Crime Club – A checklist of First Editions 758:The bungalow belonged to Sir Herman Cohen, a rich 3035:The Witness for the Prosecution and Other Stories 1131:– first published under the alternative title of 1121:– first published under the alternative title of 3477: 1665:(Revised ed.). Fontana Books. p. 207. 1502:Chris Peers, Ralph Spurrier and Jamie Sturgeon. 1115:– first published in issue 272 in December 1929. 1068:– first published in issue 350 in December 1927. 1051:All but one of the stories (the exception being 33:Dust-jacket illustration of the first UK edition 3084:Miss Marple's Final Cases and Two Other Stories 2060:Miss Marple's Final Cases and Two Other Stories 1717: 1715: 1587:Miss Marple's Final Cases and two other stories 1080:– first published in issue 352 in February 1928 1074:– first published in issue 351 in January 1928. 1046: 859:Miss Marple's Final Cases and Two Other Stories 1005:1963, Dell Books (New York), Paperback, 192 pp 832:Jane Helier makes a return in the short story 457: 147:is a short story collection by British writer 2294: 1838: 1263:and H. Harrington and published in the UK by 1147:– first published in issue 276 in April 1930. 1141:– first published in issue 275 in March 1930. 1092:– first published in issue 354 in April 1928. 1086:– first published in issue 353 in March 1928. 842:in the US in November 1941, and in the UK in 740: 373: 346:. The latter sank six months earlier and its 1712: 930: 669:, followed soon after by one of the hydro's 286: 1288:, the fourth novel to feature Miss Marple. 1257:The Best Detective Stories of the Year 1928 1243:in February 1930 (Volume 31, Number 5) and 1153:– first published in issue 277 in May 1930. 1098:– first published in issue 355 in May 1928. 2301: 2287: 1845: 1831: 1622:Anderson, Isaac (5 March 1933). "Review". 1273:The Best English Detective Stories of 1928 925: 852:. The story was published posthumously as 27: 3091:Problem at Pollensa Bay and Other Stories 1686: 1684: 1682: 1561: 1517:Detective Fiction – the collector's guide 1383: 944:, Sir Henry Clithering calls Mrs Bantry " 488:and read that it is also an antidote for 247: 16:Short story collection by Agatha Christie 1721: 1621: 1584: 1538: 995:(New York), Paperback (Avon number T245) 394: 235:finds out that Clithering is staying in 3105:While the Light Lasts and Other Stories 1805:at the official Agatha Christie website 1660: 751:the parlourmaid, met Jane, and drunk a 3478: 3056:The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding 2044:The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding 1690: 1679: 1161:, was first published in issue 462 of 974:(New York), Paperback, (Dell number 8 958: 635: 2282: 1826: 1541:"American Tribute to Agatha Christie" 986:Miss Marple and the Thirteen Problems 762:gent, and in it he had installed his 2799:The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side 2234:Agatha Christie's fictional universe 1967:The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side 1810:Slapdash Review and Quotations from 1534: 1532: 1498: 1496: 1421:was adapted for the fifth series of 1202:The Solving Six and the Golden Grave 1002:, Paperback (Great Pan G472), 186 pp 836:. This story was first published in 778: 693: 592: 500: 196: 3496:Miss Marple short story collections 3360:Agatha Christie: A Life in Pictures 2308: 1724:Agatha Christie, An English Mystery 1351: 1298:"To Leonard and Katharine Woolley" 866:Literary significance and reception 856:in a short story collection titled 165:. The UK edition retailed at seven 13: 3329:Agatha Christie's Secret Notebooks 3042:Three Blind Mice and Other Stories 2229:Tropes in Agatha Christie's novels 2036:Three Blind Mice and Other Stories 1589:. Collins Crime Club. p. 37. 1454:, which first aired 20 June 2010. 1291: 467:order was granted, followed by an 14: 3507: 3070:The Golden Ball and Other Stories 1795: 1529: 1493: 1368:The appearance of Miss Marple in 1296:The dedication of the book reads: 1239:. The same magazine also printed 1192:The Solving Six and the Evil Hour 328: 201:As in her short story collection 3460: 3459: 2263: 2262: 1008:1965, Fontana Books (Imprint of 948:", the legendary storyteller of 848:in July 1944 under the title of 554: 472:opened her eyes and saw a fresh 102:Print (hardback & paperback) 3392:Agatha and the Midnight Murders 3049:The Under Dog and Other Stories 2435:The Mysterious Affair at Styles 1774: 1757: 1740: 1654: 1133:The Resurrection of Amy Durrant 850:The Case of the Buried Treasure 649:in her lifetime, but she could 151:, first published in the UK by 3384:Agatha and the Curse of Ishtar 3376:Agatha and the Truth of Murder 1642: 1630: 1624:The New York Times Book Review 1615: 1603: 1578: 1555: 1509: 1135:in issue 274 in February 1930. 882:The New York Times Book Review 155:in June 1932 and in the US by 110:256 (first edition, hardcover) 1: 3447:Agatha Christie Award (Japan) 3322:The Mousetrap and Other Plays 2484:The Mystery of the Blue Train 1610:The Times Literary Supplement 1564:"Dahlias, Dainty or Dashing?" 1486: 1415:, first airing 20 June 2013. 1397:The Thumb Mark of Saint Peter 1157:The final story in the book, 1125:in issue 273 in January 1930. 820: 446:in water with a few drops of 3486:1932 short story collections 3063:Double Sin and Other Stories 2841:By the Pricking of My Thumbs 2526:Murder on the Orient Express 2352:Tommy and Tuppence Beresford 2052:Double Sin and Other Stories 1696:Agatha Christie, A Biography 1047:First publication of stories 1019:Edition, Hardcover, 207 pp; 189:is the fictional village of 7: 3165:Witness for the Prosecution 2470:The Murder of Roger Ackroyd 1612:(8 September 1932); pg. 625 1515:John Cooper and B.A. Pyke. 1483:, airing in 2004 and 2005. 1325:The Murder of Roger Ackroyd 1226:The Thumb Mark of St. Peter 1096:The Thumb Mark of St. Peter 951:One Thousand and One Nights 458:The Thumb Mark of St. Peter 10: 3512: 3294:Come, Tell Me How You Live 2596:Hercule Poirot's Christmas 2533:Why Didn't They Ask Evans? 2498:The Murder at the Vicarage 2372:Chief Inspector James Japp 2357:Lady Eileen "Bundle" Brent 2203:Agathe kann's nicht lassen 1911:The Murder at the Vicarage 1585:Christie, Agatha (1983) . 1360:on the inside flap of the 1208:The Blood-Stained Pavement 1151:The Affair at the Bungalow 1084:The Blood-Stained Pavement 741:The Affair at the Bungalow 561:The Companion (fairy tale) 558: 547:which the ammonia – as an 374:The Blood-Stained Pavement 3455: 3410: 3338: 3278: 3230: 3114: 2954: 2931:The Rose and the Yew Tree 2899: 2456:The Man in the Brown Suit 2426: 2410: 2339: 2316: 2258: 2221: 2141: 2074: 2009: 1902: 1895: 1864: 1475:Motive versus Opportunity 1267:in 1929 and in the US by 1217:Motive versus Opportunity 1188:The Idol House of Astarte 1164:Nash's Pall Mall Magazine 1105:The Story-Teller Magazine 1090:Motive versus Opportunity 1072:The Idol House of Astarte 931:References to other works 873:Times Literary Supplement 585:, Australia. Miss Barton 287:The Idol House of Astarte 127: 114: 106: 98: 90: 80: 70: 56: 48: 38: 26: 3491:Collins Crime Club books 3368:The Unicorn and the Wasp 3346:Agatha Christie Memorial 3130:And Then There Were None 3007:Parker Pyne Investigates 2624:One, Two, Buckle My Shoe 2610:And Then There Were None 2191:Agatha Christie's Marple 1722:Thompson, Laura (2007). 1661:Barnard, Robert (1990). 1441:Agatha Christie's Marple 1424:Agatha Christie's Marple 1408:Agatha Christie's Marple 1405:for the sixth series of 1392:has been adapted twice. 1170:Detective Story Magazine 514:means warning; the Blue 242: 162:The Tuesday Club Murders 159:in 1933 under the title 3262:Butter in a Lordly Dish 3028:The Labours of Hercules 2938:A Daughter's a Daughter 2729:They Do It with Mirrors 2645:The Body in the Library 2491:The Seven Dials Mystery 2449:The Murder on the Links 2367:Captain Arthur Hastings 2174:The Body in the Library 1943:They Do It with Mirrors 1919:The Body in the Library 1319:Illustrated London News 926:References or allusions 518:means danger; the Blue 3137:Appointment with Death 3000:The Listerdale Mystery 2979:The Mysterious Mr Quin 2869:Elephants Can Remember 2855:Passenger to Frankfurt 2673:Death Comes as the End 2589:Appointment with Death 2463:The Secret of Chimneys 2248:Murder at the Vicarage 2142:Television adaptations 1782:The Secret of Chimneys 1651:, 13 June 1932 (p. 17) 1456:The Secret of Chimneys 1447:The Secret of Chimneys 1384:Television adaptations 1381: 1371:Murder at the Vicarage 1253:The Tuesday Night Club 1178:The Tuesday Night Club 1066:The Tuesday Night Club 827:The Tuesday Night Club 276:Hundreds and thousands 248:The Tuesday Night Club 157:Dodd, Mead and Company 22:The Thirteen Problems 3098:The Harlequin Tea Set 2986:The Thirteen Problems 2785:Cat Among the Pigeons 2708:A Murder Is Announced 2561:Murder in Mesopotamia 2505:The Sittaford Mystery 2347:Superintendent Battle 2020:The Thirteen Problems 1935:A Murder Is Announced 1865:Characters and places 1812:The Thirteen Problems 1803:The Thirteen Problems 1460:Superintendent Battle 1377:The Thirteen Problems 1366: 1348:(1936) on Katharine. 1345:Murder in Mesopotamia 1316:. Having read in the 1308:when he and his wife 1285:A Murder is Announced 1123:The Hat and the Alibi 915:Old Man in the Corner 632:suspicion of murder. 144:The Thirteen Problems 3193:The Unexpected Guest 3077:Poirot's Early Cases 2924:Absent in the Spring 2771:4.50 from Paddington 2757:Hickory Dickory Dock 2743:A Pocket Full of Rye 2715:They Came to Baghdad 2442:The Secret Adversary 2362:Sir Henry Clithering 2115:The Alphabet Murders 2091:Murder at the Gallop 1959:4.50 from Paddington 1951:A Pocket Full of Rye 1882:Sir Henry Clithering 1639:, 6 June 1932 (p. 2) 1566:. Hayes Garden World 1543:. Home.insightbb.com 1458:originally featured 1438:were woven into the 1012:), Paperback, 192 pp 213:Sir Henry Clithering 183:Sir Henry Clithering 3301:Star Over Bethlehem 3021:The Regatta Mystery 2965:Poirot Investigates 2917:Unfinished Portrait 2813:A Caribbean Mystery 2778:Ordeal by Innocence 2750:Destination Unknown 2547:Death in the Clouds 2158:Murder with Mirrors 2150:A Caribbean Mystery 2028:The Regatta Mystery 1975:A Caribbean Mystery 1399:were combined with 1339:Death in the Clouds 1119:A Christmas Tragedy 959:Publication history 938:A Christmas Tragedy 845:The Strand Magazine 636:A Christmas Tragedy 539:with water to kill 23: 3287:The Road of Dreams 3200:Go Back for Murder 3144:Murder on the Nile 3014:Murder in the Mews 2993:The Hound of Death 2820:At Bertram's Hotel 2722:Mrs McGinty's Dead 2694:Taken at the Flood 2631:Evil Under the Sun 2568:Cards on the Table 2554:The A.B.C. Murders 2512:Peril at End House 2123:The Mirror Crack'd 1983:At Bertram's Hotel 1314:Archibald Christie 1221:Where's the Catch? 1058:The Royal Magazine 1015:1968, Ulverscroft 879:Isaac Anderson in 839:This Week Magazine 209:Tuesday Night Club 153:Collins Crime Club 120:Peril at End House 75:Collins Crime Club 21: 3473: 3472: 3430:Ashfield, Torquay 3371:(2008 TV episode) 2972:Partners in Crime 2736:After the Funeral 2680:Sparkling Cyanide 2659:The Moving Finger 2582:Death on the Nile 2540:Three Act Tragedy 2519:Lord Edgware Dies 2276: 2275: 2070: 2069: 1927:The Moving Finger 1765:The Blue Geranium 1748:Greenshaw's Folly 1733:978-0-7553-1487-4 1471:The Blue Geranium 1436:The Herb of Death 1419:The Blue Geranium 1402:Greenshaw's Folly 1390:The Blue Geranium 1278:The storyline of 1241:The Blue Geranium 1237:Pictorical Review 1233:The Four Suspects 1159:Death by Drowning 1145:The Four Suspects 1139:The Herb of Death 1113:The Blue Geranium 1053:The Four Suspects 942:The Herb of Death 920:Death by Drowning 779:Death by Drowning 694:The Herb of Death 593:The Four Suspects 570:on the island of 537:potassium cyanide 501:The Blue Geranium 363:Princetown Prison 355:The Three Anchors 229:Death by Drowning 204:Partners in Crime 197:Plot introduction 181:, and her friend 140: 139: 133:Lord Edgware Dies 91:Publication place 61:Detective fiction 3503: 3463: 3462: 3426:(second husband) 3400:See How They Run 3363:(2004 docudrama) 3315:An Autobiography 3255:Three Blind Mice 3233:television plays 2848:Hallowe'en Party 2764:Dead Man's Folly 2652:Five Little Pigs 2377:Miss Jane Marple 2303: 2296: 2289: 2280: 2279: 2266: 2265: 2099:Murder Most Foul 2075:Film adaptations 1900: 1899: 1872:Miss Jane Marple 1847: 1840: 1833: 1824: 1823: 1789: 1778: 1772: 1761: 1755: 1744: 1738: 1737: 1719: 1710: 1709: 1688: 1677: 1676: 1658: 1652: 1646: 1640: 1634: 1628: 1627: 1619: 1613: 1607: 1601: 1600: 1582: 1576: 1575: 1573: 1571: 1559: 1553: 1552: 1550: 1548: 1536: 1527: 1513: 1507: 1500: 1352:Dustjacket blurb 1269:Horace Liveright 452:disappearing ink 128:Followed by 115:Preceded by 82:Publication date 31: 24: 20: 3511: 3510: 3506: 3505: 3504: 3502: 3501: 3500: 3476: 3475: 3474: 3469: 3451: 3436:Greenway Estate 3420:(first husband) 3418:Archie Christie 3406: 3334: 3274: 3248:The Yellow Iris 3232: 3226: 3110: 2956: 2950: 2901: 2895: 2890:Sleeping Murder 2876:Postern of Fate 2422: 2406: 2397:Mr. Harley Quin 2335: 2312: 2310:Agatha Christie 2307: 2277: 2272: 2254: 2217: 2211:Ms. Ma, Nemesis 2137: 2083:Murder She Said 2066: 2011: 2005: 1999:Sleeping Murder 1891: 1860: 1854:Agatha Christie 1851: 1798: 1793: 1792: 1779: 1775: 1762: 1758: 1745: 1741: 1734: 1720: 1713: 1706: 1689: 1680: 1673: 1659: 1655: 1647: 1643: 1635: 1631: 1620: 1616: 1608: 1604: 1597: 1583: 1579: 1569: 1567: 1562:Angela Slater. 1560: 1556: 1546: 1544: 1537: 1530: 1514: 1510: 1501: 1494: 1489: 1386: 1354: 1302:Leonard Woolley 1297: 1294: 1292:Book dedication 1265:Faber and Faber 1182:The Solving Six 1049: 961: 933: 928: 868: 823: 781: 743: 696: 675:blood poisoning 638: 595: 564: 557: 503: 460: 405:First World War 401: 380:Polharwith Arms 376: 331: 289: 250: 245: 199: 149:Agatha Christie 99:Media type 83: 63: 43:Agatha Christie 34: 17: 12: 11: 5: 3509: 3499: 3498: 3493: 3488: 3471: 3470: 3468: 3467: 3456: 3453: 3452: 3450: 3449: 3444: 3439: 3433: 3427: 3421: 3414: 3412: 3408: 3407: 3405: 3404: 3396: 3388: 3380: 3372: 3364: 3356: 3348: 3342: 3340: 3336: 3335: 3333: 3332: 3325: 3318: 3311: 3304: 3297: 3290: 3282: 3280: 3276: 3275: 3273: 3272: 3265: 3258: 3251: 3244: 3236: 3234: 3228: 3227: 3225: 3224: 3217: 3210: 3207:Fiddlers Three 3203: 3196: 3189: 3182: 3175: 3168: 3161: 3154: 3147: 3140: 3133: 3126: 3118: 3116: 3112: 3111: 3109: 3108: 3101: 3094: 3087: 3080: 3073: 3066: 3059: 3052: 3045: 3038: 3031: 3024: 3017: 3010: 3003: 2996: 2989: 2982: 2975: 2968: 2960: 2958: 2952: 2951: 2949: 2948: 2941: 2934: 2927: 2920: 2913: 2905: 2903: 2897: 2896: 2894: 2893: 2886: 2879: 2872: 2865: 2858: 2851: 2844: 2837: 2830: 2823: 2816: 2809: 2802: 2795: 2792:The Pale Horse 2788: 2781: 2774: 2767: 2760: 2753: 2746: 2739: 2732: 2725: 2718: 2711: 2704: 2697: 2690: 2683: 2676: 2669: 2662: 2655: 2648: 2641: 2634: 2627: 2620: 2613: 2606: 2603:Murder Is Easy 2599: 2592: 2585: 2578: 2571: 2564: 2557: 2550: 2543: 2536: 2529: 2522: 2515: 2508: 2501: 2494: 2487: 2480: 2473: 2466: 2459: 2452: 2445: 2438: 2430: 2428: 2424: 2423: 2421: 2420: 2414: 2412: 2408: 2407: 2405: 2404: 2399: 2394: 2389: 2387:Hercule Poirot 2384: 2382:Ariadne Oliver 2379: 2374: 2369: 2364: 2359: 2354: 2349: 2343: 2341: 2337: 2336: 2334: 2333: 2328: 2323: 2317: 2314: 2313: 2306: 2305: 2298: 2291: 2283: 2274: 2273: 2271: 2270: 2259: 2256: 2255: 2253: 2252: 2244: 2242:(radio series) 2236: 2231: 2225: 2223: 2219: 2218: 2216: 2215: 2207: 2199: 2187: 2179: 2178: 2177: 2162: 2154: 2145: 2143: 2139: 2138: 2136: 2135: 2131:Shubho Mahurat 2127: 2119: 2111: 2103: 2095: 2087: 2078: 2076: 2072: 2071: 2068: 2067: 2065: 2064: 2056: 2048: 2040: 2032: 2024: 2015: 2013: 2007: 2006: 2004: 2003: 1995: 1987: 1979: 1971: 1963: 1955: 1947: 1939: 1931: 1923: 1915: 1906: 1904: 1897: 1893: 1892: 1890: 1889: 1884: 1879: 1874: 1868: 1866: 1862: 1861: 1850: 1849: 1842: 1835: 1827: 1821: 1820: 1815: 1807: 1797: 1796:External links 1794: 1791: 1790: 1773: 1756: 1739: 1732: 1711: 1704: 1678: 1671: 1653: 1641: 1629: 1614: 1602: 1596:978-0002315968 1595: 1577: 1554: 1539:Steve Marcum. 1528: 1508: 1491: 1490: 1488: 1485: 1467:Ingots of Gold 1452:Julia McKenzie 1444:adaptation of 1434:Elements from 1429:Julia McKenzie 1413:Julia McKenzie 1395:Elements from 1385: 1382: 1353: 1350: 1293: 1290: 1230: 1229: 1223: 1214: 1205: 1198:Ingots of Gold 1195: 1185: 1155: 1154: 1148: 1142: 1136: 1126: 1116: 1100: 1099: 1093: 1087: 1081: 1078:Ingots of Gold 1075: 1069: 1048: 1045: 1044: 1043: 1033: 1030: 1027: 1013: 1006: 1003: 996: 989: 978: 968: 965: 960: 957: 956: 955: 932: 929: 927: 924: 906:Robert Barnard 867: 864: 822: 819: 780: 777: 742: 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2458: 2457: 2453: 2451: 2450: 2446: 2444: 2443: 2439: 2437: 2436: 2432: 2431: 2429: 2425: 2419: 2418:St. Mary Mead 2416: 2415: 2413: 2409: 2403: 2400: 2398: 2395: 2393: 2390: 2388: 2385: 2383: 2380: 2378: 2375: 2373: 2370: 2368: 2365: 2363: 2360: 2358: 2355: 2353: 2350: 2348: 2345: 2344: 2342: 2338: 2332: 2329: 2327: 2324: 2322: 2319: 2318: 2315: 2311: 2304: 2299: 2297: 2292: 2290: 2285: 2284: 2281: 2269: 2261: 2260: 2257: 2251: 2249: 2245: 2243: 2241: 2237: 2235: 2232: 2230: 2227: 2226: 2224: 2220: 2213: 2212: 2208: 2205: 2204: 2200: 2197: 2194:(2004–2013) ( 2193: 2192: 2188: 2185: 2184: 2180: 2176: 2175: 2171: 2170: 2168: 2167: 2163: 2160: 2159: 2155: 2152: 2151: 2147: 2146: 2144: 2140: 2133: 2132: 2128: 2125: 2124: 2120: 2117: 2116: 2112: 2109: 2108: 2104: 2101: 2100: 2096: 2093: 2092: 2088: 2085: 2084: 2080: 2079: 2077: 2073: 2062: 2061: 2057: 2054: 2053: 2049: 2046: 2045: 2041: 2038: 2037: 2033: 2030: 2029: 2025: 2022: 2021: 2017: 2016: 2014: 2008: 2001: 2000: 1996: 1993: 1992: 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51: 47: 44: 41: 37: 30: 25: 19: 3442:Agatha Award 3424:Max Mallowan 3398: 3390: 3382: 3374: 3366: 3358: 3350: 3327: 3320: 3313: 3306: 3299: 3292: 3285: 3267: 3260: 3253: 3246: 3239: 3219: 3212: 3205: 3198: 3191: 3184: 3179:Towards Zero 3177: 3172:Spider's Web 3170: 3163: 3156: 3149: 3142: 3135: 3128: 3123:Black Coffee 3121: 3103: 3096: 3089: 3082: 3075: 3068: 3061: 3054: 3047: 3040: 3033: 3026: 3019: 3012: 3005: 2998: 2991: 2985: 2984: 2977: 2970: 2963: 2955:Short story 2943: 2936: 2929: 2922: 2915: 2908: 2888: 2881: 2874: 2867: 2860: 2853: 2846: 2839: 2832: 2825: 2818: 2811: 2804: 2797: 2790: 2783: 2776: 2769: 2762: 2755: 2748: 2741: 2734: 2727: 2720: 2713: 2706: 2699: 2692: 2685: 2678: 2671: 2666:Towards Zero 2664: 2657: 2650: 2643: 2636: 2629: 2622: 2615: 2608: 2601: 2594: 2587: 2580: 2575:Dumb Witness 2573: 2566: 2559: 2552: 2545: 2538: 2531: 2524: 2517: 2510: 2503: 2496: 2489: 2482: 2477:The Big Four 2475: 2468: 2461: 2454: 2447: 2440: 2433: 2402:Raymond West 2321:Bibliography 2247: 2239: 2209: 2201: 2189: 2181: 2172: 2169:(1984–1992) 2164: 2156: 2148: 2129: 2121: 2113: 2107:Murder Ahoy! 2105: 2097: 2089: 2081: 2058: 2050: 2042: 2034: 2026: 2019: 2018: 1997: 1989: 1981: 1973: 1965: 1957: 1949: 1941: 1933: 1925: 1917: 1909: 1877:Raymond West 1811: 1802: 1781: 1776: 1764: 1759: 1747: 1742: 1726:. Headline. 1723: 1695: 1662: 1656: 1649:Daily Mirror 1648: 1644: 1637:The Scotsman 1636: 1632: 1623: 1617: 1609: 1605: 1586: 1580: 1568:. Retrieved 1557: 1545:. Retrieved 1516: 1511: 1503: 1478: 1474: 1470: 1466: 1464: 1455: 1445: 1439: 1435: 1433: 1422: 1418: 1417: 1406: 1400: 1396: 1394: 1389: 1387: 1376: 1369: 1367: 1355: 1343: 1337: 1334:Max Mallowan 1323: 1317: 1300: 1295: 1283: 1279: 1277: 1272: 1259:, edited by 1256: 1252: 1248: 1244: 1240: 1236: 1232: 1231: 1225: 1220: 1216: 1211: 1207: 1201: 1197: 1191: 1187: 1181: 1177: 1168: 1162: 1158: 1156: 1150: 1144: 1138: 1132: 1128: 1122: 1118: 1112: 1108:as follows: 1103: 1101: 1095: 1089: 1083: 1077: 1071: 1065: 1056: 1052: 1050: 985: 949: 946:Scheherazade 941: 937: 919: 913: 904: 899:Daily Mirror 897: 895: 890:The Scotsman 888: 887: 880: 878: 871: 869: 857: 854:Strange Jest 853: 849: 843: 837: 834:Strange Jest 833: 831: 826: 824: 815: 802: 794: 790: 782: 768: 757: 744: 731: 716: 697: 688: 673:who died of 660: 639: 616: 612: 599: 596: 586: 580: 576: 572:Gran Canaria 565: 545:litmus paper 534: 525: 508: 504: 482: 461: 450:in it (i.e. 441: 434: 430: 422:spiritualist 408: 402: 396: 387: 385: 379: 377: 359: 354: 352: 343: 332: 318: 310: 290: 275: 271: 258: 254:Raymond West 251: 237:St Mary Mead 228: 225: 217:Commissioner 208: 202: 200: 191:St Mary Mead 179:Raymond West 161: 160: 143: 142: 141: 131: 118: 18: 3403:(2022 film) 3395:(2020 film) 3387:(2019 film) 3379:(2018 film) 3355:(1979 film) 3279:Other books 3241:Wasp's Nest 2957:collections 2617:Sad Cypress 2392:Parker Pyne 2331:Adaptations 2240:Miss Marple 2206:(2005–2007) 2186:(2004–2005) 2166:Miss Marple 2012:collections 2010:Short story 1858:Miss Marple 1698:. Collins. 1450:, starring 1427:, starring 1411:, starring 1261:Ronald Knox 1212:Drip! Drip! 1017:Large-print 806:wheelbarrow 684:fire escape 486:Pilocarpine 399:Opportunity 368:Whit Monday 233:Miss Marple 187:frame story 175:Miss Marple 3480:Categories 3339:Depictions 3231:Radio and 3151:The Hollow 2945:The Burden 2902:Westmacott 2827:Third Girl 2806:The Clocks 2687:The Hollow 2340:Characters 1547:7 February 1487:References 1362:dustjacket 1249:Companions 993:Avon Books 972:Dell Books 821:Continuity 772:understudy 719:engagement 671:housemaids 665:died from 629:"Georgine" 568:Las Palmas 465:exhumation 322:South Pole 2411:Locations 1570:15 August 1310:Katharine 1000:Pan Books 735:digitalin 712:digitalis 667:pneumonia 656:conductor 642:Spa Hydro 625:governess 583:Melbourne 516:Hollyhock 478:St. Peter 415:left his 298:Stone Age 266:cornflour 167:shillings 86:June 1932 71:Publisher 3465:Category 3221:Chimneys 3214:Akhnaton 2900:As Mary 2326:Universe 2268:Category 2222:See also 2196:Episodes 1694:(1984). 936:In both 764:mistress 753:cocktail 748:bungalow 723:alkaloid 704:foxglove 608:Somerset 549:alkaloid 520:Geranium 512:Primrose 490:atropine 293:Dartmoor 215:, an ex- 171:sixpence 49:Language 3411:Related 3186:Verdict 2883:Curtain 2862:Nemesis 2638:N or M? 1991:Nemesis 647:capital 627:, that 620:dahlias 604:Camorra 474:haddock 469:autopsy 426:sΓ©ances 395:Motive 348:bullion 344:Otranto 335:Whitsun 302:Astarte 262:arsenic 52:English 3438:(home) 3432:(home) 3352:Agatha 2427:Novels 2250:(play) 2214:(2018) 2161:(1985) 2153:(1983) 2134:(2003) 2126:(1980) 2118:(1965) 2110:(1964) 2102:(1964) 2094:(1963) 2086:(1961) 2063:(1979) 2055:(1961) 2047:(1960) 2039:(1950) 2031:(1939) 2023:(1932) 2002:(1976) 1994:(1971) 1986:(1965) 1978:(1964) 1970:(1962) 1962:(1957) 1954:(1953) 1946:(1952) 1938:(1950) 1930:(1942) 1922:(1942) 1914:(1930) 1903:Novels 1730:  1702:  1669:  1593:  1523:  1039:  1023:  998:1961, 991:1958, 980:1953, 970:1943, 727:poison 679:bridge 663:porter 495:asylum 448:iodine 444:starch 437:estate 417:estate 314:barrow 281:trifle 135:  122:  39:Author 3308:Poems 3115:Plays 1896:Books 1358:blurb 910:Orczy 541:wasps 243:Plots 107:Pages 57:Genre 1787:IMDb 1770:IMDb 1753:IMDb 1728:ISBN 1700:ISBN 1667:ISBN 1591:ISBN 1572:2014 1549:2013 1521:ISBN 1473:and 1356:The 1037:ISBN 1021:ISBN 940:and 896:The 870:The 811:pram 786:mill 760:city 708:duck 700:Sage 651:will 413:will 388:were 306:Moon 169:and 1856:'s 1785:at 1768:at 1751:at 1275:. 922:." 912:'s 825:In 798:pub 587:was 409:his 219:of 3482:: 1714:^ 1681:^ 1531:^ 1495:^ 1469:, 1306:Ur 813:. 714:. 686:. 658:. 397:v. 370:! 193:. 2302:e 2295:t 2288:v 2198:) 1846:e 1839:t 1832:v 1736:. 1708:. 1675:. 1599:. 1574:. 1551:. 1204:. 1194:. 1184:. 988:) 977:) 954:. 563:.

Index


Agatha Christie
Detective fiction
Short stories
Collins Crime Club
Peril at End House
Lord Edgware Dies
Agatha Christie
Collins Crime Club
Dodd, Mead and Company
shillings
sixpence
Miss Marple
Raymond West
Sir Henry Clithering
frame story
St Mary Mead
Partners in Crime
Sir Henry Clithering
Commissioner
Scotland Yard
Miss Marple
St Mary Mead
Raymond West
arsenic
cornflour
Hundreds and thousands
trifle
Dartmoor
Stone Age

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