Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Literature / TheMurderAtTheVicarage

Go To

1%%
2%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=16882535460.26002400
3%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
4%%
5[[quoteright:325:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/vic_61.png]]
6%%
7''The Murder at the Vicarage'' is a 1930 detective novel by Creator/AgathaChristie. It is the first novel to feature Literature/MissMarple, the [[BlatantLies harmless]] old lady who lives at the [[StepfordSuburbia idyllic]] village of St Mary Mead and [[MysteryMagnet just happens]] to [[LittleOldLadyInvestigates constantly bump into murders]]. (The character had previously debuted in short stories, which were later published together as story collection ''Literature/TheThirteenProblems''.)
8
9In the aforementioned St Mary Mead, there is [[UncannyVillage a general climate of harmony and good-will]] and everyone gets along. Everyone, that is, except Colonel Protheroe, the most disliked man in the village. His daughter wishes he would do a good thing and die, and even the vicar observes that killing him would be a service to the townsfolk. Then, Protheroe [[AssholeVictim is found murdered]] in the vicar's study. His unfaithful wife and her artist lover both confess to the murder, to the great confusion of Inspector Slack. It's up to Miss Marple to make sense of this story and find out who really did it...
10
11The book is narrated in first person by the vicar, Leonard Clement.
12
13It was adapted [[Series/MissMarple1984 by the BBC in 1986]] with Creator/JoanHickson in the role of Miss Marple and again [[Series/{{Marple}} by ITV in 2004]] with Geraldine [=McEwan=] as Miss Marple. There is also a 1949 play with Barbara Mullen and a graphic novel released by Harper Collins in 2008.
14
15Christie dedicated the book to her daughter and only child, Rosalind Hinks.
16
17'''WARNING: Heavy unconcealed spoilers ahead.'''
18----
19!! This novel contains examples of:
20
21* TheAce: Lawrence Redding, a handsome young man who apparently "does everything well". He's a talented artist, a good shot, excellent at games, has charming personality, can tell a good story.
22* AllLoveIsUnrequited: Dennis is infatuated with Lettice, who's in love with Lawrence Redding, who's in love with [[BigScrewedUpFamily her stepmother, who's married to Lettice's father]].
23* AwLookTheyReallyDoLoveEachOther: At the start of the novel, Len's so irritated with Griselda, he contemplates writing to the archbishop that the Church should bring back celibacy into the clergy. Despite this, they are HappilyMarried, to the point that when Leonard thinks that Miss Marple is suggesting that Griselda is unfaithful, he immediately leapt to her defense.
24* BabiesEverAfter: At the end of the story [[spoiler:Griselda reveals to Clement that she's pregnant.]]
25* BewareTheNiceOnes: Dr. Haydock, the village physician, is an extremely kind and caring man, and at one point expresses the opinion that criminals are just sick people in need of care rather than punishment. [[spoiler: When he learns of Redding's plot to frame and murder Hawes - who is suffering the after effects of Sleeping Sickness - he's only too happy to help the police catch him. ]]
26* BlackWidow: [[spoiler:Anne Protheroe murders her husband at the instigation of her lover.]]
27* BluffingTheMurderer: Miss Marple is able to reconstruct how the murder was done, but not to find any evidence solid enough for the police to act on, so she suggests they set a watch and then drop the suspect a remark she devises that will mean nothing to an innocent man but make a guilty man suspect they've got something on him. His reaction gives them all the evidence they need.
28* BoomHeadshot: Col. Protheroe is killed with a single pistol shot to the back of the head.
29* CharacterizationMarchesOn: Miss Marple is at times a rather bossy, nosy, unpleasant woman throughout the course of the book. Having realized that she wanted to write more stories with Marple as the detective, Christie toned down on some of these characteristics for later mysteries.
30* ChekhovsHobby: Len narrates that Lawrence Redding "does everything well", and gives several examples, one of which becomes important at the climax: [[spoiler:after his innocence is clearly demonstrated by his shocked reaction to the murder and his surprise at the revelation of various details that would have been known only to the murderer, Miss Marple pulls the rug out by reminding us that he's a talented amateur actor]].
31* ConnectedAllAlong: Lettice reveals that [[spoiler:Mrs. Lestrange is her mother.]]
32* ContinuityNod: St. Mary Mead, which from this novel for the next 45 years or so would be the home of Miss Jane Marple, was actually first mentioned in earlier novel ''Literature/TheMysteryOfTheBlueTrain'', a Franchise/HerculePoirot novel.
33* DeadpanSnarker: Vicar Clement does his level best not to offend his parishioners, but can't help slipping in a snide remark or two when they start to get too melodramatic.
34-->'''Miss Weatherby:''' I do shrink from publicity. And to stand up in court!
35-->'''Vicar Clement:''' ''(drily)'' In special cases, they let witnesses sit down.
36** His snark comes through much more often in the narration.
37* TheDitz: Whether or not Lettice Protheroe, who rather ostentatiously can't even seem to tell what day and time it is, is using this trope for the purposes of ObfuscatingStupidity--and if so, to what extent--is left as an exercise for the reader.
38* EurekaMoment: Miss Marple has one when a neglected houseplant gives her the answer to the one part of the puzzle she had not been able to figure out.
39* EveryoneIsASuspect: Played with. Miss Marple talks about having "seven suspects" whom she believes is the most likely murderer, and this list comprises pretty much all the major characters, including the Vicar himself. However, she doesn't name her suspects until the actual killer is arrested.
40* FirstPersonPeripheralNarrator: The novel is told from the perspective of Vicar Clement, who is much more involved with the police investigations (what with the murder taking place in his house) than Miss Marple herself.
41* FourthDateMarriage: Leonard proposed marriage to Griselda after only knowing her for 24 hours. Even he's not sure why.
42* FramingTheGuiltyParty: A key to the murder plot.
43** [[spoiler:Lawrence and Anne plant several clues to make it look like Colonel Protheroe was shot at 6:20, right when Anne came to the vicarage to see if her husband was there. The police are meant to see through these clues and assume the crime was committed later.]]
44** [[spoiler:Lettice plants one of Anne's earrings at the crime scene, convinced that her stepmother was guilty but unable to find any evidence of it.]]
45* FrameUp: [[spoiler:Curate Hawes]] confesses to an entirely different crime and appears to commit suicide, when it was actually [[spoiler:Lawrence switching out Hawes' medication]]. However, at first it does appear that he's confessing to the murder.
46* GossipyHens: Several of them. Miss Marple humorously admits she is one at one point.
47* HappilyMarried: Played with to great and hilarious effect with the Clements.
48* HenpeckedHusband: The Vicar, occasionally, as a side effect of his utter devotion to his wife. Even when their completely incompetent maid Mary attempts to leave their services, Leonard reluctantly obeys Griselda's plea to dissuade the girl, although Len himself doesn't like Mary and would probably be much happier if she was gone.
49* HiddenDepths: There are dimensions of Leonard Clement's character that surprise even him. His wife comments that he is 'very unexpected' and she never feels she really knows him... which may be why she married him.
50* HollywoodSilencer: Averted. [[spoiler:A maid hears 'a man's sneeze', which sounds much closer to a real silencer, used to cover up the fatal gunshot.]]
51* LethalChef: Griselda can't cook or keep house in general. Their maid, Mary, isn't much better than her.
52* LittleOldLadyInvestigates: Miss Marple is of course the TropeCodifier.
53* LoveMakesYouEvil: [[spoiler:Anne Protheroe]]
54* MayDecemberRomance: Leonard and Griselda. He's 20 years older than her, she had many other suitors, and he proposed to her within 24 hours of meeting her despite the fact, as she cheerfully puts it, that "[[OppositesAttract I am everything you disapprove of in a woman."]]
55* MedicationTampering: [[spoiler:Lawrence switches Hawes' medication with a poison, nearly killing him]].
56* {{Nephewism}}: The Vicar lives with his nephew Dennis, whom he and his wife appear to be raising as their own. His biological parents are not mentioned.
57* NotNowKiddo: Rev. Clement twice tries to tell Inspector Slack that the clock in his study was deliberately set fifteen minutes ahead. After Slack rudely demands silence, Clement decides not to bother telling him, hoping that Slack will be embarrassed if he finds out later, having spent a fair bit of thought on the timing of the murder based on the clock.
58* PoliceAreUseless: Inspector Slack is very energetic, but ultimately doesn't do much to solve the crime other than interrogate people. Colonel Melchett contributes more, but it's ultimately Miss Marple that figures the whole thing out.
59* RedemptionEarnsLife: A rather literal case: [[spoiler:Curate Hawes calling the Vicar to confess about his StickyFingers ends up saving his life when he's poisoned by the murderer, as the phone call to the Vicar is the only reason he's found in time.]]
60* RedHerring: The whole business with Miss Cram and the suitcase [[spoiler:turns out to be part of a plot to rob Protheroe, not kill him.]]
61* RevealingCoverup: [[spoiler:Mrs. Protheroe stops to talk to Miss Marple on her way to kill her husband, making sure that Miss Marple will note the timing of her movements and also the fact that she doesn't have a purse with her or any other place she could conceal a gun. It backfires when it occurs to Miss Marple to wonder just ''why'' Mrs. Protheroe wouldn't have brought her purse on a shopping trip...]]
62* SexySecretary: Miss Cram, the leggy young secretary who is quite obviously looking to land Dr. Stone the archaeologist as a marriage partner.
63* ShoutOut: The Vicar and Lawrence briefly refer to [[Literature/FatherBrown the stories]] of Christie's fellow Detective Club member Creator/GKChesterton.
64* StickyFingers: In the beginning of the novel, the Vicar briefly mentions an incident about a missing pound note from the church offering, though he thought that someone had just made a mistake over the amount of money they had actually given. Later, it is revealed that [[spoiler:Curate Hawes had stolen it, and the reason he called the Vicar was to confess to his stealing habits.]]
65* StockingFiller: Rev. Clement cannot help but notice when Miss Cram sits and crosses her legs, "which were encased in shiny pink stockings."
66* StoppedClock: Rev. Clement's clock was knocked over and broken when Protheroe was killed, seemingly fixing the time--but this creates confusion as Rev. Clement was in the habit of setting the clock 15 minutes fast.
67* TakeOurWordForIt: At one point, the Vicar, whose sermons are usually "dull and scholarly", is inspired to preach an evangelical call to repentance. He describes it almost entirely through its effect on his audience.
68* TakingTheHeat: Both Lawrence Redding and his lover Anne Protheroe confesses to the murder, while insisting the other is innocent. It is then deduced that the two had separately stumbled upon the corpse, wrongly concluded that their loved one had committed the deed and made the confession in order to protect the other. [[spoiler:Subverted. The two were actually co-conspirators to the crime, and made the confession to confuse the police.]]
69* ThisIsReality: Invoked by Marple in how she was onto [[spoiler: Redding]] as the culprit.
70-->'''Marple''': I know that in the book [[NeverTheObviousSuspect the least likely person is the killer]] but in reality, that's rarely the case.
71* TwoDunIt: The solution, and one of Agatha Christie's favorite tropes. Lawrence and Anne were in on it together, conspiring to kill her husband because Lawrence wanted the money.
72* UnspokenPlanGuarantee: Inverted. Miss Marple's plan is spelled out to the audience beforehand, and its success is confirmed in one brief, almost off-hand sentence after the fact.
73* TheVicar: Leonard Clement is often described by his parishioners as being too trusting and "unworldly"... not at all accurately, as it turns out.
74* WhoMurderedTheAsshole: As the Colonel is the most disliked man in the village of St. Mary Mead, most of the villagers have a good reason to see him dead. Even the ''vicar'' says that killing him would be a service to the community. On the first page.
75* YouWatchTooMuchX: Near the beginning, Griselda starts speculating about the mysterious and possibly sinister Mrs Lestrange, and Len tells her she reads too many detective novels.
76
77!!The ITV television adaptation additionally contains examples of:
78* NosyNeighbor: Miss Marple and her circle of gossipy women gather for what they call "tea and scandal" and as a group peep from behind a window curtain to watch Anne Protheroe when she scurries half-dressed from Lawrence's house.

Top