Ratings13
Average rating2.7
This book has gotten way more crap than it deserves. First off, it was one of the last books Christie wrote and the fifth in a series. For the most part, you can read Christie's books out of order. (I am about to finish reading them all chronologically, so I know.) Not so with her Tommy and Tuppence novels. If you read it alone, I can see why it isn't her best. But to cap off the Tommy and Tuppence saga I rather enjoyed it. You wouldn't read the fifth Harry Potter before reading the others first, would you? Then you can't really judge this one apart from the rest.
The reason I enjoyed it is because it revisits characters that I enjoy. And though I haven't enjoyed as many of Christie's later novels, I wouldn't go as far as to say she was losing her mental faculties. Many of her books since the beginning involve elderly people who should remember something important but don't. There is a lot of banter, but there is a lot of banter in general in her books, especially in Tommy and Tuppence.
The mystery part was a tad lacking in this one, and it was moderately easy to solve. But honestly there was a lot less ideology than some of her other spy novels so I liked that. If you are a true Christie fan, and you have read her other Tommy and Tuppence, you will be glad you read this one.