Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Christie, Agatha (Vol. 12) - Julian Barnes
Christie, Agatha (Vol. 12) - Julian Barnes
JULIAN BARNES
Ingenious to the last, Agatha Christie kept back one Poirot and one Miss Marple story, each written some 30 years ago, for publication after her death. The date of its vintage, of course, doesn't matter in the least, since Christieland is as socially frozen and lacking in specifically dating detail as the world of [P. G.] Wodehouse or [Ivy] Compton-Burnett. It's all as ordered, stiff and unlikely as an everlasting flower: from gay, happy young couples and solid professional oldsters to servants who can't spell and gardeners who can't even pronounce the names of plants properly. Here, murders are by definition a trifle insane; good men tend to attract bad women; psychiatrists have just been heard of, though Miss Marple prefers to call them ironically 'mental specialists'; and the phrase for a girl who enjoys a bit of a fling (gosh, the idiom is catching) is 'man mad'.
Sleeping Murder has nice newlyweds Gwenda and Giles settling in the West...
[The entire page is 273 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- William Rose BenéT
- Proteus
- I. M. Parsons
- Will Cuppy
- Nicholas Blake
- Ralph Partridge
- Will Cuppy
- Gilbert Norwood
- Ralph Partridge
- Rupert Hart-Davis
- Isaac Anderson
- Ralph Partridge
- Rose Feld
- Edmund Wilson
- Robert Kee
- Anthony Boucher
- Anthony Boucher
- Anthony Boucher
- Anthony Boucher
- Sumi Yamashita
- Marcia Keller
- Anthony Lejeune
- Howard Haycraft
- Eric Shorter
- MARGOT PETERS and AGATE NESAULE KROUSE
- Dick Datchery
- Francis Wyndham
- Peter Prescott
- Adam Ulam
- Julian Barnes
- Julian Symons
- Emma Lathen
- J. C. Trewin
- Naomi Bliven
- E. F. Bargainnier
- Julian Symons
- David I. Grossvogel
- Copyright
