Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Murder Is Easy (1939) - Written by Agatha Christie

Agatha Christie is known as one of the most eminent writers of the 20th century, not in terms of classics, but in terms of what is called detective fiction. And when you find that the sales of books that an author has written are only beaten by those of The Bible and Shakespeare, then the rating of the author should go up another notch. When the author has created two endearing characters, those of Hercule Poirot (the egoistical egg-headed Belgian detective who is also very successful at solving crimes) and that of the elderly village spinster Miss Marple, you do know that the books would be interesting to read.
However, what do you do when you get a book that does not feature either of these 2 characters. Agatha Christie had written books that involve other characters other than these 2 main detectives, but not too many and they are not really as famous as the ones involving Hercule Poirot or Miss Marple. The one exception could be this book - Murder is Easy. The book takes the main character to be Luke Fitzwilliam, returning after his job overseas in the police. Now, if Hercule Poirot was cerebral, Luke is nowhere in the same league. Be far from it for him to sit in an armchair and wait for the plot to come to him, for the little grey cells to work.



Instead, he gets stuck in the murder mystery by sheer luck, when he meets a lady on a train who tells him that she is going to Scotland Yard to tell them about a series of murders in her village and who the next victim will be. Poppycock indeed, except that Luke reads the next day that the lady has died and then next, the person she had named who would be the next victim. This intrigues Luke who tries to find a contact in the village so that he can stay there, and he promptly is declared to be the cousin of a local lady.
Talking to villagers, talking to the family members of the victims (although the circumstances of the deaths were such that local villages believed that these were accidents rather than murders - somebody who confused paint with cough syrup, an infected cut, falling from the roof and so on - all of these are accidents that could happen to anyone).
After arriving there, there is one more murder. Because of  what has been happening, they suspect a series of people, but when they finally find the murderer, is too late ? Will there be one more murder ? This is a book that is worth the suspense, but if you are looking for a cerebral splash like Sherlock Holmes or Poirot, it is not there. However, the reviews at the time that the book was published were overall positive. In my opinion, a different Agatha Christie book, but still a good novel.


Murder Is Easy (1939) - Written by Agatha Christie

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