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Hercule Poirot har trukket sig tilbage, men kontaktes af den engelske indenrigsminister. Poiots nære ven, kaptajn Hastings, er forfærdet, da Poirot afslår.
I stedet interesserer Poirot sig for miss Magdala "Nick" Buckley, der bor i "End House". Hun er kun 22 år gammel,
På råd fra Poirot tilkalder Nick en slægtning Maggie Buckley, som kan passe på hende, men næppe er denne ankommet før hun bliver skudt og dræbt. Hun har Nicks røde sjal om sig, så det var sikkert en forveksling og derfor i virkeligheden Nick, der skulle være skudt?
Der er forskellige personer i omgangskredsen, som virker mistænkelige, et par fra Australien Mr. og Mrs Croft, en ældre bejler commander George Challenger på 40 år, en fætter Charles Vyse der også er advokat, en kunsthandler Jim Lazarus, en husholderske Ellen, hendes mand, en veninde Frederica Rice. Nick har skrevet testamente, men hun mener ikke selv at der er store penge at hente der for nogen. Pudsigt nok ser testamentet ud til at være forsvundet i posten.
Frederica Rice er gift med en træls person, som bare er forduftet, så hun kan ikke engang få skilsmisse fra ham.
Efter Maggie Buckley er død, fortæller Nick at hun ikke har noget at leve for mere, for hendes forlovede Michael Seton er død under et forsøg på at flyve jorden rundt. Det er nu lidt mærkeligt at hun havde købt en sort kjole på forhånd.
Michael havde en onkel, der var den næstrigeste i England og han døde uventet, mens Michael var undervejs.
Poirot kan ikke finde hoved eller hale på mysteriet, før han overvejer om det måske er Nick, der er fuld af løgn.
Han har fået arrangeret at hun er isoleret på et plejehjem og efter endnu et attentat på hendes liv, får han både plejehjem og politi med på at lade som om hun er død.
Det lokker ægteparret Croft ud af busken og de afsløres som et par svindlere, der har forfalsket Nicks testamente. Til ingen nytte for hun er jo ikke død.
Til gengæld afslører Poirot at Nick har udnyttet at kusinen også hedder Magdala og at denne har holdt sin forlovelse med Seton hemmeligt for alle andre end hende.
Nicks motiv var at få arven fra Seton, så hun kunne beholde End House og blive dejligt rig. I slutscenen når Rice's mand at dukke op og begå selvmord, så hun kan gifte sig med kunsthandleren Jim Lazarus. Og Nick får fat i en overdosis kokain og dør ligeledes. Meget bekvemt. George Challenger sælger kokain som fragtes rundt i små armbåndsure. Han får kokainen fra sin onkel og fordufter, da Poirot afslører ham. Meget bekvemt. Inspektør Japp dukker op til sidst, men som pensionist, så han kan også se gennem sine fingre.
Glimrende Poirot-krimi.
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Fiction. Mystery. Historical Fiction. HTML: In the Agatha Christie classic Peril at End House, a young woman who has recently survived a series of very close calls appears to be the target of a dedicated killer�??and it's up to Hercule Poirot to save her life. On holiday on the Cornish Riviera, Hercule Poirot is alarmed to hear pretty Nick Buckley describe her recent "accidental brushes with death." First, on a treacherous Cornish hillside, the brakes on her car failed. Then, on a coastal path, a falling boulder missed her by inches. Later, an oil painting fell and almost crushed her in bed. So when Poirot finds a bullet hole in Nick's sun hat, he decides that this girl needs his help. Can he find the would-be killer before he hits his target?… (more)
User reviews
This book is exactly what you come to expect from an Agatha Christie mystery, but with a change in Hercule Poirot, the famous detective and star of this mystery series. He has just retired and is slowly settling into a quiet, calm life of leisure
The great Hercule Poirot, who is known far and wide for his unmatched detective skills, can’t resist asking one question, then another, then another. A perplexing and potentially deadly set of circumstances takes shape, and his concern for the wellbeing of a young woman he happens to meet, leads him to investigate. However, the motives and players behind this mystery prove themselves difficult for him to ascertain. Where he was always bursting with confidence and assuredness in his perceptions, skills, and outcomes, he is now struggling with something unfamiliar to him – a shaky self-confidence that worsens and lingering uncertainty. He finds himself bumbling about without meaning to. As events unfold, he feels powerless to stop them. His once sharp and nearly infallible intellect and investigative skills seem to be outmatched. His frustration grows and so do his mistakes, missteps, and incorrect assumptions.
With its intriguing twists and turns, Peril at End House is a very engaging and rewarding mystery tale and will be sure to please die-hard Agatha Christie fans as well as those new to the stories.
Rai Aren, co-author of Secret of the Sands
It's just one of those attempts of bending the rules of mystery writing. A coup that Agatha Christie pulls off but with little aplomb. The red herrings are too unlikely and ponderous. St Loo, the location, seems like a nest of crime. Too much not interesting stuff happens in too few days. I don't care for this book's characters, and therefore I don't care for the book itself. Poirot was very bland in it. He cannot be interesting by himself, however clever his deductions are. He's not even that eccentric. Hastings was a waste of space. I don't like that duo much. Poirot is a necessity for explaining, other than that he doesn't contribute a lot to the atmosphere. I will remind myself never to read this paltry offering again. I hope there's not too many Agatha Christie books like that.
That should have been the end of my review, but for those who haven't read this book, I request you to at least read the first few pages and if you like the style and the setting, do go for it. You may extract from it more than I could. After all, this book might be even a darling of the critics, a classic that I'm dissing. A good review lets the reader be the judge. I rest my case.
Although Christie's early work includes some of her best, in this one she still seems to be finding her way. Poirot's character is a bit jumpy here, and the solution to the plot seemed pretty obvious to me from a ways off.
Still, I'd recommend this one for its lively writing, good period detail, and general Christie-esque charm.
This was a good one. I'm intrigued by detective writers' Christie and Sayers's use of the resort as
It is Poirot's 6th novel, and there's a couple of gentle references in
Hastings and Poirot are having a week's holiday at St. Loo in Cornwall. Hastings has recently returned from Argentina, seemingly having left his wife behind. Poirot has retired and turns down a request from the Home Secretary to go up to London to take on a most urgent case. However he reserves the right to take on a new case if it interests him.
As always Poirot is attracted to a pretty young thing, Miss Nick Buckley, who appears to have recently been shot at. When he hears that she has had several near encounters with death just recently Poirot decides to make her protection his business. Nick Buckley is a young flapper living well beyond her means at End House. She is surrounded by a coterie of similar care-free young things who party a lot and experiment with drugs like cocaine. Any one of them could be a danger to Miss Nick, but why would any of them want to kill her?
Despite his own confidence in his own abilities, PERIL AT END HOUSE clearly demonstrates that even the great Hercule Poirot is fallible. Poirot says that Hastings always leaps to the wrong conclusions, and so we have come to expect Hastings to be led astray by sentiment, but not Hercule Poirot who prides himself on his deductive methods and his use of "the little grey cells". Agatha Christie's behind-the-hand smirking at her own pompous creation is almost palpable.
Without doubt, the beautiful narration of Hugh Fraser, who has appeared in a number of the TV episodes as Hastings, contributed to my enjoyment.
But let's take nothing away from the cleverness of the plot, nor from the controversial ending in which, to Hastings' horror, Poirot allows the murderer to cheat the gallows.
Poirot has retired, and is taking his leisure in a seaside town, determined not to take on any new cases. But when a pretty young woman by the nickname of Nick tells him about a series of
Red herrings and side plots abound, but Poirot gets there in the end. It's a beautifully constructed book, with the answer right in front of the reader from early in the book, concealed by some artful misdirection. The audiobook is read by Hugh Fraser. who plays Hastings in the tv series. Fraser is generally a good reader, but I found his portrayal of Poirot rather off-putting. He uses a very strong accent that in comparison with Suchet's performance sounds like an overplayed stereotype. Of course, part of the problem here is that Suchet *is* Poirot for me, and anything else would sound wrong -- and my subconscious attention is drawn to it because Hastings sounds right.
In spite of which, I enjoyed this 3 CD set a lot. The story has been abridged well, and I enjoy listening to Hugh Fraser. I happened to pick this up in The Works for four pounds, and think that it was superb value for money at that price. List price is 13 pounds, although the online shops are listing it for less. I might think twice about paying full price for others in the series because of my issue with Fraser's portrayal of Poirot, but I wouldn't have considered it a waste of money. One minor point with the cheap version offered in The Works -- it's a very simple case with only one spindle for the 3 CDs, so you have to lift the first discs out to get at the later discs, with an additional risk of scratching one eventually. It's also available in download.
When I checked this out from the library I hadn’t realized that I had recently watched the BBC Poirot solve this case. At first I was disappointed I already knew the end, but I found I listened to the story differently and was able to pick up on some subtle clues and foreshadowing. One thing that really struck me was how much of an ass Hastings was in this book. He has this superiority complex with nothing to be superior about. It seems his role in the book was to blurt out inane observations to have Poirot make sense of them and as a result to highlight how much smarter, and genteel, Poirot is. I thought this was a heavy handed tactic. And it was even more disappointing, especially since this audio book was read by Hugh Fraser, who plays a likeable (albeit still slightly bumbling) Hastings in the BBC series.
1. The person who almost dies but doesn't
2. The person who is the only witness to important events
3. The person to whom the money
All these people are the murderer.
Also, like every single AC that I've thought I solved but hadn't, there is that all-important loose end in the easy solution, that has to be explained in order for one to get the right solution. I got the easy solution and was so proud of myself. It wasn't precisely the right solution--it neglected to account for that one important thing: the actual murder. My bad.
At the start Poirot is retired and intends to stay that way. His endearing conceit lets slip that England won't have their
I appreciate the charm of Poirot being slightly off his game in this book as he is occasionally caught unaware by events. Seeing the famed detective flustered from time to time is a welcomed departure.
He then starts to find clues, to investigate people, just for helping Nick.
Unknown words:
Shawl: a piece of wool or other material worn, especially by women, about the shoulders, or the head and shoulders, in place of a coat or hat outdoors
Hilt:the handle of a sword or dagger.
Baffle:to frustrate or confound
Dictum:an authoritative pronouncement; judicial assertion.
It strikes me however how very much her storylines rely on the particularities of society so
This is a fine example of the kinds of puzzling cases Christie is so good at crafting. We have a large cast of interesting characters – a sullen housemaid, a sweet ingénue, a suspicious Australian couple, a best friend (who’s married to a drunk), an aviator who has gone missing during an around-the-world mission, an art dealer, and a penniless former Navy commander. There are considerable plot twists, and just when you are sure you have it figured out, Christie throws another curve at you.
On the whole an entertaining summer read.
This is Christie by the numbers, at a point in her career (1932) when she could really first be said to have patterns and tropes emerging in her work. It's probably around this point that Christie starts considering phasing Captain Hastings out - he'll be gone from the novels in another five years - and Japp is already relegated to little more than an extended cameo. Still, this is very much the Poirot of the popular perception, fussy and a bit exaggerated, without the "Papa Poirot" speeches or tangents into Catholicism that occasionally show up in the earlier books. As such, Peril at End House is probably a strong candidate for the first "regular" Poirot novel - even coming, as it does, seventh in the series, and well after the runaway success of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd. It's a strong formula, and if it seems a little familiar in retrospect, that doesn't stop it being entertaining. The book practically glides along: it's incredibly "readable."
Christie will stick to the same basic framework and tone for the Poirot mysteries for almost another decade, an unusually prolific period in her career; there are no less than fourteen Poirot novels between this one and Five Little Pigs in 1942, with several of them regarded as classics. It's only after the war - and Christie's own fears of being killed in the Blitz, which led to the writing and ferreting away of Curtain - that the stories start to take a far darker turn. This is, effectively, the Poirot everyone remembers, and the Poirot everyone wants to revisit. It's like your favorite childhood candy: nothing terribly substantial but full of nostalgia and pleasant memories. There are far worse ways to spend a couple of afternoons poolside than with Hercule Poirot, his friend Hastings, and the mysterious goings-on at End House.
What a way to begin the year.... with a loser!
M. Poirot & Hastings are on holiday, staying at a beach side hotel..... Enter a young woman, Nick, who has been shot at and has had a few other near attempts on her life in the past 3 days....
M. Poirot takes these attempts very seriously, but Nick
During the fireworks, both Nick & her cousin go back in the house for their coats. The cousin is found shot to death wearing Nick's the shawl, proof that Nick is in danger.
I didn't like this book, I didn't like the characters...... I also didn't like the constant barrage of forced dialog between Poirot & Hastings. Hastings was his usual inept self, and Poirot was all conjecture, exclamations, & prattle.
Pretty Nick Buckley has had four near misses in three days. The first three weren't much, but the latest one involved a
But despite all his precautions, the murderer strikes. Poirot will have to act fast if he's not to let a killer get away.
I enjoyed this one. There was a plot twist that reminded me a bit of The ABC Murders, one of my favorite of her books. Poirot is in top form in this one and it was a fun read.
CMB
"Still no news of that flying fellow, Seton, in his round-the-world flight. Pretty plucky, these fellows. That amphibian machine of his, the Albatross, must be a great invention. Too bad if he's gone west. Not that they've given up hope yet. He may have made one of the Pacific Islands."
"The Solomon islanders are still cannibals, are they not?" inquired Poirot pleasantly.
"Must be a fine fellow. That sort of thing makes one feel it's a good thing to be an Englishman after all."
"It consoles for the defeats at Wimbledon," said Poirot.
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Omslaget viser en ung kvinde i sort selskabskjole liggende på jorden
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi
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823.91 |