Crooked House

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Agatha Christie: Crooked House (2010, HarperCollins)

E-book

English language

Published Aug. 6, 2010 by HarperCollins.

ISBN:
978-0-06-200661-5
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
650854209

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4 stars (21 reviews)

Three generations of the Leonides family live together in a large, if somewhat crooked looking, house. Then the wealthy patriarch, Aristide, is murdered. Suspicion falls on the whole household, including Aristide's two sons, his widow – fifty years his junior – and even his three grandchildren. Could any member of this seemingly devoted family have had a hand in his death? Can Charles Hayward, fiance of the late millionaire's granddaughter, help the police find the killer and clear his loved one's name?Christie always acknowledged this novel as one of her favourites. She said in an interview in The Sunday Times that she enjoyed best writing the Crooked House type novel, "which depends on a family and the interplay of their lives."

60 editions

Review of 'Crooked House (Minotaur Mysteries)' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I really wanted to like this one. For once, a Christie novel starts with people of flesh and bone, people one can like, relate to, identify with, etc. And then there is Christie's own statement that while other books may have been day-at-the-office affairs, this one was a labour of love.
Well... I really didn't like it. Whatever charm and promise the first couple of chapters had in terms of character depiction, soon vanished into ordinary Christie coolness, the plot never seemed real, the philosophical undercurrents - that one can always justify a Christie novel by: those semi-explicit considerations about what is truth, human nature, knowledge, good, etc. - this time were non-existent or just uninteresting. Oh, and the murderer was completely made-up, and for the first time, I had guessed it almost from the start, which is not a good sign, since I'm notoriously bad at guessing.
Was it …

Review of 'Crooked House (Minotaur Mysteries)' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

“Writing Crooked House was pure pleasure and I feel justified in my belief that it is one of my best.” (Agatha Christie)

I agree with Christie here. "Crooked House" is one of her best. One thing that Christie always excelled at was portraying the interaction between members of a group, be it the Leonides family in "Crooked House," the "guests" in [b:And Then There Were None|16299|And Then There Were None|Agatha Christie|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1391120695s/16299.jpg|3038872], or the tourists in [b:Evil Under the Sun|16305|Evil Under the Sun (Hercule Poirot, #23)|Agatha Christie|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1386922974s/16305.jpg|907837]. These aren't mindless stereotypes - they are people.

"Crooked House" is a non-series novel - no Poirot, Miss Marple or (thank heavens!) Tommy and Tuppence. The story is narrated by Charles Hayward, who is engaged to Sophia Leonides, granddaughter of Aristide Leonides, a Greek who came to England decades earlier and made a fortune. He married the daughter of an English squire and had …

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