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Lädt ... Murder is Easy (St. Martin's Minotaur Mysteries) (Original 1939; 2001. Auflage)von Agatha Christie (Autor)
Werk-InformationenDas Sterben in Wychwood von Agatha Christie (1939)
Lädt ...
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Not one of her best at all. Felt flimsy. It’s also clear she’s better at crime than romance. ( ) Due to a chance encounter on a train, Luke Fitzwilliam sees a woman, Miss Pinkerton, that reminds him of his Aunt Mildred. Miss Pinkerton tells Luke about several murders in her small town. He decides to investigate and his friend Jimmy tells Luke that his cousin Bridget is at Ash Manor, the home of Lord Whitfield. As Luke asks about the murders, he starts noticing a pattern, they are all connected in some way. A classic Christie. A middling Christie. There's a good hook—on a train journey, recently retired policeman Luke Fitzwilliam meets an elderly lady who is convinced there's a serial killer at work in her village. When Luke learns that the woman was killed shortly after, and that one of her predictions appears to have come true, he decides to investigate the goings on personally. Equally enjoyable is the portrait Christie sketches of bucolic Wychwood, which is of course populated by characters both grotesque and comic. But these assets aren't good enough to make up for the predictable plot (admittedly perhaps fresher in the 1930s than it is almost a century later), the limp romance subplot, and how annoying Luke is. 'Murder Is Easy' was new to me and I enjoyed it for its freshness and its distinctive tone of quiet menace. This is a book about subversive, powerful, determined women - the kind who, in earlier times, in their village of Wychwood, would have been branded as witches. It is a warning to men who underestimate the older, invisible women or who accept the exterior image of the young, attractive ones. It's a book in which most men are fools or tools or both. There's a sort of proto-Marple feel to the book except that while these village women, like Jane Marple, miss nothing, they feel entitled and perhaps obliged to intervene in events and force them to a conclusion. I think that Christie deliberately masks the subversive, never-mind-the-patriarchy-it's-the-women-pulling-the-strings nature of 'Murder Is Easy' by having a man as the hero. Fitzwilliam is a 'rude colonial', blinkered by a Public School education, an outdated understanding of England, no recent personal experience of English women, a romantic streak a mile wide a middling intellect and the limited imagination of a plodding policeman. When the book came out in 1939, I imagine that Fitzwilliam would have made the male readers feel comfortable while the women readers saw right through him. As usual with Agatha Christie's books, 'Murder Is Easy' is ripe with good candidates for being the hand behind the killings. I was happily mislead a number of times and kept revisiting my own assessments of people. I found the absence of a clever detective quite liberating. I didn't have to wade through their logic or put up with their mannerisms (OK, so I find Poirot annoying and Marple scary. I refuse to be ashamed of that.). It seemed as if this opened up the possibilities in the book and apart from the too-hapless-to-be-dangerous Fitzwilliam, left me with no safe place to stand. Like other Christie books, this one has some into-love in it. I didn't believe it. I never do. But, this time, I don't think I was meant to. It seems to me that while Luke Fitzwilliam, a man with very little experience of women and now in search of a wife, might easily convince himself of love at first sight, Bridget Conway's far too strong-willed and intelligent and has too great a sense of her own worth, to entertain the idea. My favourite image in the book is of Conway, head down, in the witches' field, thinking. It's the only time we see her when she isn't presenting herself to create a particular impression. It's an image of quiet, independent strength accustomed to reflection. Fitzwilliam should have known then that he was in over his head. I think I was meant to see Conway as a woman who having fully understood the cost of her future comfort, has decided to change course and hitch a ride with a man she knew that she could out-think and, if necessary, replace later. I listened to the audiobook version of 'Murder Is Easy', narrated by Gemma Whelan, who did an excellent job. I recommend this version rather than the Hugh Fraser version because this is a book that needs strong female voices and Gemma Whelan provides them. Click on the SoundCloud link below to hear a sample. https://soundcloud.com/harpercollinspublishers/murder-is-easy-by-agatha-1?utm_so... After reading a whole bunch of mysteries (or maybe thrillers? Not sure about the distinction), I understand better why Christie's books have stood the test of time. Sure, her mysteries can be formulaic, but they're so well constructed, and the characters are so interesting. This one was a delight to read/listen to, very much an "evil lurking in unlikely places" kind of story. keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
Ist enthalten inFive Complete Novels of Murder and Detection: And Then There Were None / Peril at End House / The Murder at Hazelmoor / Easy to Kill / Evil Under the Sun von Agatha Christie 1930s Omnibus: The Sittaford Mystery, Why Didn't They Ask Evans, And Then There Were None, Murder is Easy von Agatha Christie Agatha Christie Crime Collection: Dead Man's Folly, The Man in the Brown Suit, Murder is Easy von Agatha Christie Death on the Nile; Dumb Witness; Appointment with Death; Murder for Christmas; Murder is Easy von Agatha Christie Bearbeitet/umgesetzt in
A quiet English village is plagued by a fiendish serial killer in Queen of Mystery Agatha Christie's classic thriller, Murder is Easy. Luke Fitzwilliam does not believe Miss Pinkerton's wild allegation that a multiple murderer is at work in the quiet English village of Wychwood and that her local doctor is next in line. But within hours, Miss Pinkerton has been killed in a hit-and-run car accident. Mere coincidence? Luke is inclined to think so - until he reads in the Times of the unexpected demise of Wychwood's Dr. Humbleby... Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.912Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1901-1945Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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