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Agatha Christie: The Body in the Library (Hardcover, 2006, Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers, Distributed by Workman Pub. Co.) 4 stars

Cheap satin and peroxide blondes were a rare sight in St. Mary Mead, at least …

Review of 'The Body in the Library' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

One of my favorite Agatha Christies and one of the very first Miss Marples I ever read. The novel starts off with Mrs Bantry being awakened by a hysterical maid informs her that there is a body in the library. Colonel Bantry goes downstairs and learns that there really is a body in the library. The dead girl - for she is very young - has bleached blonde hair, heavy makeup, and painted nails, and is wearing a gaudy, but cheap and old gown. She looks very out of place in the colonel's warm, old-fashioned library. No one recognizes the victim. She is definitely not from the area. Mrs Bantry has more faith in her old friend, Miss Marple, that she does the local police - and with good reason. Miss Marple suggests a likely suspects - the arrogant and deeply unpleasant Basil Blake, son of an old friend of Mrs Bantry's. He works in show business in a minor role behind the scenes and he has been seen with a platinum blonde. I won't spoil the rest of the story, but suffice it to say that things aren't what they seem in more ways than one.