
Detective novel by
Agatha Christie. It was the first novel she wrote and the one where
that Belgian detective of hers was introduced.
Or was he French? You know who I mean- that
funny little man with the egg-shaped head and the
ridiculous moustache. Written (and set) during
World War One but first published in 1920.
The novel is narrated in first person by Lieteunant Hastings, who, returning invalided from World War I, is invited by his childhood friend John Cavendish at the family manor, Styles Court. On his arrival there, he meets John’s stepmother Emily, a
generous but difficult woman who has recently married Alfred Inglethorp,
a man much younger than her. Hastings also meets John’s beautiful but enigmatic wife, Mary Cavendish, his nervous brother, Lawrence Cavendish, the mysterious Doctor Bauerstein, Mrs Inglethorp's companion Evelyn Howard, and her young protégé Cynthia Murdoch.
Poirot is introduced as a retired Belgian detective and an old friend of Hastings’s. He is a war refugee staying at a village near Styles Court and meets Hastings coincidentally. When Mrs Inglethorp dies, displaying symptoms alarmingly like those of strychnine poisoning, Poirot is asked and agrees to investigate the case.
The novel is absolutely
Fair Play Whodunit; if anything, it has an overabundance of clues (as well as an overabundance of
red herrings) which would not be seen in Christie’s later works.
A review from the
Pharmaceutical Journal, which applauded “this detective story for dealing with poisons in a knowledgeable way, and not with the nonsense about untraceable substances that so often happens” was Christie’s personal favorite.
The novel has been adapted by ITV as part of the
Agatha Christie’s Poirot series starring David Suchet as Poirot, and by BBC Radio Four with John Moffat as Poirot.
Christie had dedicated the book to her mother.
This work of fiction contains examples of: