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Conferences! Stockings! Fox Hunts!: The ABC Murders | 1936

4.11.2016
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"A madman, mon ami, is to be taken seriously. A madman is a very dangerous thing." -Hercule Poirot, The ABC Murders, p. 5

The Sum of It:
This week, we present to you, dear readers, our recap of what has become one of our favorite #DameAgatha novels: The ABC Murders. We begin with the dynamic duo of Poirot and Hastings reunited again (it seems like Agatha decided these two just weren't as great without each other and has decided to keep them together #4eva). Poirot is dying his hair (#scandal!) and Hastings pretends to be shocked, but has also adopted the combover technique for his own sparse locks. Having tried retirement and not liking it too much (since he always gets pulled into solving murders anyway), Poirot is back in London and looking for the cream of the crop of crime to solve. Just such a crime comes his way in the form of a mysterious letter announcing a murderer's intention to commit a crime in the town of Andover in a few days. Poirot is skeptical of the taunting note because there is something that just doesn't seem right to him about the whole thing. But sure enough, the appointed day rolls around and an elderly shopkeeper named Ascher is found #coshed with an ABC railway guide near her body! The game is afoot!

Before long Poirot is receiving more letters with dates and locations of future murders and they are all in a sinister pattern following the alphabet (#clever). Betty Barnard is belt-strangled in Bexhill! Sir Carmichael Clarke is #coshed in Churston! (and so forth). At each location an ABC railway guide is found, reinforcing the murderer's devious plan to work his or her way through the alphabet of towns in England. (Also causing the question to be asked "uh...what's gonna happen when they get to the letter X?" #goodquestion). Poirot becomes more and more frustrated as he attempts to get one step ahead of the killer, and yet the bodies keep piling up. Along the way, he collects a legion of family members of the victims who attempt to make sense of the crime, and do their part to stop the murders. Just when you think Agatha has given you some resolution (#ABC), SHE DOES THE UNTHINKABLE! Another twist! And a better ending than you could have hoped for. This is truly one of Agatha's most ingenious plots, and deserves to be in the top "To-Reads" for anyone looking to read more of the Queen of Crime.

A Brief List of Hilarities:
This recap would not be complete without noting some truly excellent Poirot & Hastings moments found in The ABC Murders:
>At one point, Poirot teases Hastings about his general extreme love of women by singing (in what appears to be a fairly grating manner) #hastingsinlove #poirotthesinger
>Poirot also suggests that Hastings should think about joining a nudist colony (Hastings is not amused).
>Hastings, trying to be considerate of Poirot's extreme need to "think things over" aka engage the Little Grey Cells! that he (Hastings) literally falls asleep rather that disturb his friend (#friendshipgoals).
>In the end, Poirot must admit that, though his friend Hastings has a rather basic mind, he is the Belgian's good luck charm once again! A stray, obvious observance from Hastings ultimately leads Poirot to solve the crime.

The YOA Treatment:
It's interesting to think in today's society full of TV show, book, and real life serial killers, that the notion of such a murderer was not common when The ABC Murders was written. agathachristie.com notes that, at the time of ABC's publication, the term "serial killer" was not even yet coined! It is this serial killer plot that caused critics at the time of its publication to initially question the book's significance, and yet ultimately to hail its brilliance. Edward Powys Mathers asked himself in a 1936 review: "Is Agatha Christie going to let me down? Does she think she can give us this kind of tale as a detective story and get away with it?" Of course she isn't and IS and even Eddie PM must admit that "Ingenuity...is a mild term for Mrs. Christie's gift."
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