Ratings33
Average rating3.3
Luke Fitzwilliam, a retired colonial policeman has returned to England and chances to converse on a train with a woman who reminds him of a favorite aunt. She informs him that she is reporting three murders to Scotland Yard and is hoping to prevent a fourth, that of a village doctor. Before she can do so, she is killed by a car, and a short time later the doctor she mentioned is killed. Fitzwilliam decides to investigate these five deaths.
Featured Series
5 primary booksSuperintendent Battle is a 5-book series with 5 primary works first released in 1925 with contributions by Agatha Christie.
Reviews with the most likes.
The beginning was good.
The middle was exciting. It got really terrifying. To the last I wasn't sure who the murderer was. I suspected everyone.
The ending was... disappointing. Especially when she explained when she realized who the murderer was. Sure, she did... Agatha wasn't at all sure when she wrote the events leading to that.
I enjoyed seeing how Luke, our sleuth, went about his investigation and his thought processes about the murders! Very methodical, but also fairly fast-paced. The murderer did actually take me by surprise–probably because I was spending too much time trying to out-think the plot! ;) And (slight spoiler) the romantic subplot was well-done! At times I found it a little frustrating, but it ended up happily.
Agatha-Christie-land is my new favourite place to dwell. Full of convoluted crimes that keep me guessing until the end.
This tale is set in a quintessentially quaint English village complete with plenty of bizarre characters, any of whom could be the dastardly murderer! Oh, and there's some tempestuous romance - yes please. Particularly loved the mental cover art - what on earth was the boomerang about, did I miss that bit in a post-nightshift read? Answers on a post-card, please!
In my quest to read all of Agatha Christie's mysteries chronologically, I found this one to be a tad boring. It came as a bit of a surprise to me because I typically like the quiet countryside murders.
Firstly, I think the plot lacked excitement and the romance subplot was a bit thin. There doesn't seem to be a string to Luke's logic so he wings it the entire time and makes assumptions off of little to no evidence. Then he falls for a certain girl in town after knowing very little about her, besides that she looks like a witch when the wind blows...
To call it a Superintendent Battle mystery is misleading, since he only shows up in the last chapter. But what a relief when that happens because the main detective, Luke, is slower than Hastings. His logic throughout the book and his piecing together of the crimes (if you can call it that) are frustrating to say the least.
Sometimes in a novel the characters know more than the reader (e.g. all of Hercule Poirot's mysteries) but in this one, the reader knows more than the characters. I suppose it is a matter of preference, but I found this book infuriating at times because of it.
Overall, I still liked the book. I like all of Christie's books. But this one lacks the pizazz that some of her others (even less popular ones) have.
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