No matter what your attitude may be to mysteries in general, I think we can all agree on one point: waking up one morning to discover the body of a murdered woman in your library - a woman, moreover, who is a complete stranger - can really put you off your breakfast. It seems so...unfair. Not to mention the fact that the situation is such a cliche in mystery fiction. And it's the situation which confronts the unfortunate Colonel Bantry - and, ultimately, that marvelous home-spun solver of impossible mysteries, Miss Jane Marple, in Agatha Christie's "The Body in the Library," the subject of this week's review on the Classic Mysteries podcast. You can listen to it here.
I think it's one of Christie's best Miss Marple stories, dating back to 1942 - and when Christie was at the top of her form, there were, and are, few other mystery authors who could compare. Christie takes the titular cliche and turns it upside down and twists it around for us. And once she has us thoroughly confused, she leads us to a dazzling and pretty-well unexpected solution to the mystery.
I should mention that this is also available in a Kindle edition, for those who want to get it in a digital format. Whether you read the hard copy or the electronic edition, don't miss this one.
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