Murder on the Orient Express
by Agatha Christie
by Agatha Christie
Length: 288
Format: Kindle Book
Price: $6.99
Price: $6.99
How I heard about it: A student of mine read it and recommended it, and then I saw the trailer for the new film.
Basic Premise: Set against the snowy backdrop of Eastern Europe in the dead of winter, this book tells the story of the mysterious murder of a gangster on board the stranded Orient Express. Everyone is suspect, but fortunately, the hailed detective Hercule Poirot is on board and on the case.
My Take: 9 out of 10 (scale here)
This was fun! I downloaded it at the tail end of our Disney trip, and thankfully Sister needed next to no help on the flight, and I was free to read. I had the book finished by the following day and Husband and I even made it out to see the movie that evening!
The book was good and interesting, but only someone as skilled as Agatha Christie could get away with such a formulaic approach to the storytelling. In perhaps a predictable manner, the crime is committed, and the suspects are interviewed...and there are many. Everyone on the train, in fact, is under suspicion. The act of calling each one in individually to get his/her story would be an easy place for readers to get bored and check out, because the suspects just keep coming. However, Christie's masterful use of both language and detail keep the reader riveted, and I am convinced that even a reluctant reader would want to keep going. It was excellent, excellent writing. The story itself was interesting, though I will say Christie depended a bit on the audience's familiarity with her protagonist, as this is the 11th book in a series. It felt a bit Westing Game-ish because of the large and varied cast of characters who all seem to be connected, but with a more serious tone. I didn't see the end coming (though perhaps I should have...the details were there!)
But I have to share my favorite moment of the book. Before he is murdered, the gangster offers Poirot a job. Here is his response:
The book was good and interesting, but only someone as skilled as Agatha Christie could get away with such a formulaic approach to the storytelling. In perhaps a predictable manner, the crime is committed, and the suspects are interviewed...and there are many. Everyone on the train, in fact, is under suspicion. The act of calling each one in individually to get his/her story would be an easy place for readers to get bored and check out, because the suspects just keep coming. However, Christie's masterful use of both language and detail keep the reader riveted, and I am convinced that even a reluctant reader would want to keep going. It was excellent, excellent writing. The story itself was interesting, though I will say Christie depended a bit on the audience's familiarity with her protagonist, as this is the 11th book in a series. It felt a bit Westing Game-ish because of the large and varied cast of characters who all seem to be connected, but with a more serious tone. I didn't see the end coming (though perhaps I should have...the details were there!)
But I have to share my favorite moment of the book. Before he is murdered, the gangster offers Poirot a job. Here is his response:
Brilliant.






