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Reading Order for the Unofficial Poirot Buddy Reads
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By Jessica-sim · 54 posts · 155 views
last updated Dec 27, 2020 08:20AM
Poirot Buddy Read 40: SPOILER THREAD Curtain
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June 2021 - The Secret of Chimneys by Agatha Christie (1925)
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What Members Thought

In this classic mystery, Poirot is invited to a dinner party with a difference by the slightly unsavoury Mr Shaitana; a rich man addicted to parties and gossip. He wants Poirot to come to dinner to meet his exhibits - murderers who he claims have "got away with it." Although Poirot finds his hobby dangerous he agrees, leading to a dinner party with four sleuths (Poirot himself, Colonel Race, who works for the Secret Service, Superintendent Battle from Scotland Yard and our old friend the detecti
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Hercule Poirot is invited to dinner. When he arrives, he finds there are eight guests, four, people new to him but the others, himself included, are connected with the world of crime detection in one or the other way―Superintendent Battle of Scotland Yard, Col. Race (connected with the Secret Service), and Ariadne Oliver, author of detective fiction. Their host is Mr Shaitana (the word “shaitan” roughly translates to devil/satan or evil), a man who takes pleasure in the power he holds over other
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May 16, 2011
Abbey
rated it
it was amazing
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review of another edition
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A most exotic - and extremely wealthy - man hosts an intriguing dinner party: the guests are four famous sleuths and four people who may have killed in the past but who have not, as yet, been found out. He drops numerous hints, and at the end of the evening is found dead. Which murderer killed again? Which sleuth will figure it all out first? One of Christie’s most peculiar stories, it’s fascinating even though I don’t understand Bridge at all and the cardgame plays a part in the solution. Super
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Review on my blog My Reader's Block.
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Poirot answered 'I agree with you, Battle. I have always disapproved of murder.'
'What a delightfully droll way of putting it,' said Mrs. Oliver. 'Rather as though it were foxhunting or killing ospreys for hats. Don't you think there are people who ought to be murdered?'
'That, very possibly.'
'Well then!.'
'You do not comprehend. It is not the victim who concerns me much. It is the effect on the character of the slayer.'
'What about war?'
"In war you do not exercise the right of private judgement. Th ...more
'What a delightfully droll way of putting it,' said Mrs. Oliver. 'Rather as though it were foxhunting or killing ospreys for hats. Don't you think there are people who ought to be murdered?'
'That, very possibly.'
'Well then!.'
'You do not comprehend. It is not the victim who concerns me much. It is the effect on the character of the slayer.'
'What about war?'
"In war you do not exercise the right of private judgement. Th ...more

Not one of Dame Agatha's best or worst. Listened to it as an audiobook.
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Jul 06, 2014
Paperbackreader
rated it
it was amazing
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May 01, 2017
Ariel
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Jan 19, 2019
Elizabeth Stultz
marked it as to-read