My “thriller winter” studying theme continues, and this week I made a decision to show to the “Queen of Crime” herself: Agatha Christie.
I requested my sister, a whodunit connoisseur, for her advice. She immediately instructed “The Murder of Roger Ackroyd,” a Poirot thriller that many take into account to be Christie’s masterpiece. Not solely is the plot suitably twisty and the setting suitably typical (richest man in a sleepy village discovered murdered inside a locked room of his fancy home), however the characterizations are sharply hilarious. And the ultimate reveal, which exploits the conventions of the thriller style to ship a genuinely unconventional denouement, is proof of Christie’s ability.
Subsequent up was her 1941 thriller, “Evil Under the Sun,” set in a glamorous seaside lodge. It evokes the actual claustrophobia of many social novels, with the characters feeling surveilled and scrutinized as a result of they’re a part of the identical broader internet of sophistication and society, even when they don’t really know one another. (In the event you want a last-minute Christmas reward and have a spare $19 million, the island and lodge that impressed the novel are for sale.)
Subsequent on my checklist is “The Penguin Ebook of Homicide Mysteries,” which The Occasions’s crime critic guarantees is stuffed with “overlooked and underappreciated” gems from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
I even have my standard stack of political science and historical past books, however for the second, I’m going to go away them on my desk. I’ll be taking a break for the vacations, so The Interpreter shall be off for the following couple of weeks. And whereas I often discover that sort of studying partaking and enjoyable, I’m feeling extra of a necessity than standard to disconnect from the information and its historic antecedents. So a minimum of for the following few days, I’ll be in fiction-only mode.
Pleased New Yr to all of you, and thanks for studying, emailing, and in any other case being a part of the fantastic Interpreter group. See you in January.
Reader responses: Books that you simply suggest
Shava Nerad, a reader in Arlington, Mass. recommends “When Victims Become Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda,” by Mahmood Mamdani:
I’m rereading this due to the dynamics of the Israel/Gaza battle. It’s an evaluation of the Rwandan genocide with lots of ideas on human nature and dehumanizing neighbors. Arduous learn — however price it.