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Agatha Christie’s Poirot: The Greatest Detective in the World

By Mark Aldridge, HarperCollins, 512 pages, $29.99

by Mark Aldridge

In a recent Washington Post poll to choose the greatest fictional detectives of all time, the top four vote-getters, tallied in descending order, were Armand Gamache, Sherlock Holmes, Harry Bosch, and Hercule Poirot. Pfui, as Rex Stout’s Nero Wolfe would say. Faced with a mind-boggling murder, would anyone turn to Louise Penny’s Gamache instead of Sherlock Holmes or to Michael Connelly’s Bosch over Hercule Poirot? I certainly wouldn’t. What the poll actually reveals is the tyranny of the contemporary. The results reflect the influence of a devoted social media fan base, an ongoing TV series, and two bestselling authors still regularly bringing out new work.

No, looked at historically, the only true contenders for world’s finest super-sleuth are Holmes and Poirot. Being a member of the Baker Street Irregulars and having written a book about Arthur Conan Doyle, I don’t need to say more about my own loyalties. But what about that other fellow, the protagonist of 33 novels and more than 50 short stories by Dame Agatha Christie? As it happens, Mark Aldridge’s just published Agatha Christie’s Poirot: The Greatest Detective in the World exhaustively and entertainingly surveys the book, stage, radio, magazine, and film appearances of that fussy little Belgian, known for his impressive mustaches and his even more impressive “little grey cells.”

Are family wagers an underrecognized generator of literary accomplishment? In 1916, Agatha Christie argued with her sister Madge that it must be relatively easy to write detective stories. To prove it, Christie jotted down some ideas, scribbled for three weeks in a hotel and came away with the manuscript of Hercule Poirot’s first case, The Mysterious Affair at Styles.

For the next decade, Christie experimented with various kinds of thrillers and whodunits, while creating a sensation in 1926 with The Murder of Roger Ackroyd. By the 1930s, she was laughingly calling herself “a sausage-maker,” cranking out two or even three books a year. In nearly every instance, the least likely suspect, anyone with an unassailable alibi or the person with no apparent motive would turn out be the ruthless killer. Several of the Poirot mysteries from this decade are breathtaking classics of misdirection, notably Murder on the Orient Express (1934) and The ABC Murders (1935).

Aldridge’s encyclopedic Poirot features brief, spoiler-free plot summaries, quotes apt passages from contemporary reviews, and brightens nearly every page with postage-stamp-sized reproductions of dust jacket and paperback cover art, photographs, or movie stills. Being a lecturer on film at England’s Solent University, as well as the author of Agatha Christie on Screen, Aldridge particularly shines in his behind-thescenes account of the David Suchet television series and in his evenhanded appraisal of Death on the Nile and Evil Under the Sun . In a foreword to Aldridge’s book, actor and screenwriter Mark Gatiss calls the second “the best time anyone can have in the cinema.” To check that assertion, I rented Evil Under the Sun and can vouch for it as a perfect COVID-era escape, the action being set on a gorgeous Mediterranean island, with a glamorous cast dressed to the nines in 1930s outfits, and everyone camping it up and having a ball.

Aldridge’s bold subtitle, The Greatest Detective in the World, echoes Poirot’s self-description (in 1928’s The Mystery of the Blue Train). Though that claim is debatable, the book itself unquestionably belongs on the same shelf as John Goddard’s Agatha Christie’s Golden Age, which meticulously dissects Poirot’s novel-length investigations, and John Curran’s two volumes devoted to Dame Agatha’s “secret notebooks.” However, Aldridge’s text should have been more closely copy-edited, not just to catch some minor factual errors — forthrightly listed on his website — but also to fix a number of loose and baggy sentences.

Having so enjoyed this celebration of all things Poirot and in the mood for more, I impetuously decided to try an experiment: What would it be like to reread, after half a century, The Murder of Roger Ackroyd when I already knew its trick?

This time, Christie’s hints to the killer’s identity stood out almost too obviously, yet I quickly surrendered to the zest and smoothness of the fastpaced storytelling. James Sheppard, the village doctor who assists Poirot and narrates the book, proved far more witty than I remembered, though his deductive skills are no better than Dr. Watson’s: When Sheppard first sees Poirot, he tells his comically nosy sister Caroline, “There’s no doubt at all about what the man’s profession has been. He’s a retired hairdresser. Look at that mustache of his.”

Throughout, Christie excels in using conversation to propel the action (and to plant clues). However, the various people suspected of Ackroyd’s murder are such genre stereotypes that I grew convinced that Christie employed them, here and throughout her work, in a spirit of ironic affection. She recognized how inherently artificial her mysteries were.

Consider the swirl of activity before and after Roger Ackroyd is stabbed with a Tunisian dagger in his study. Ultimately, for Christie, the true solution to Ackroyd’s murder needn’t be plausible, merely possible. Still, one key revelation near the end struck me as unfair, being contrary to what we’d previously been told about it.

No matter. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd remains a triumph. As Poirot stresses when speaking of its solution, “Everything is simple, if you arrange the facts methodically.” That sounds easy enough, but only a great detective, like the Belgian (or Sherlock Holmes!), can disentangle the essential from the inessential. — Michael Dirda/For

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2021-05-14T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-05-14T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://enewmexican.pressreader.com/article/281599538385242

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