Vacation is over. Tomorrow is back to work for me and in a week or so it’s back to school for my kids. It’s always bittersweet for me when summer comes to an end. It is my favorite time of the year, the rest I merely tolerate. For my last vacation I brought a Pulitzer winner and read zero pages. This time I learned my lesson that there are different books for different purposes, so I selected a sports micro-history and a mystery. Those are the genres I can relax with the best and isn’t that what vacation is all about. For this year I have taken part in a Read Christie challenge. I have read Agatha Christie since my adolescent years but not a variety of her body of work. This has been a chance for me to fill in the gap with those books that I neglected. I have read some of the challenge selections, so I replaced those with ones that I hadn’t gotten to yet. So far I am eight for eight and hope to finish the challenge strong in the last third of the year. One aspect of Christie’s work that I hadn’t read before is her stand alone novels. It happens that Ordeal by Innocence is a book selected by the challenge and a new to be title. I used my vacation to catch up with the Queen of Crime.
Sunny Point is home to Leo and Rachel Argyle. Rachel comes from old money and fell for Leo as a young woman. All Rachel ever desired was to be a mother but early in her marriage she discovered that she was unable to bear children. Her diagnosis took place prior to World War II, decades before artificial means of fertility were possible. The only way for a woman like Rachel Argyle to become a mother would be through adoption. On a trip to New York, she found a young girl named Mary who had been neglected and pleaded with Leo to bring her home. He would defer to her, as he would throughout their marriage. During the war, Rachel started Sunny Point, a country estate home that would rescue children from the bombing in London. Rachel lavished on these children as though they were her own, and after the war used her monetary influence to adopt the four war orphans from the worst background. Although Leo was skeptical, he allowed his wife to live out her dream of being a mother. The five children- Mary, Jack, Micky, Hester, and Tina- became Argyles, a ready made family. They received the best that money could buy, but Rachel did not factor in their genetics. One day these children might want to know of their origins or at the very least to leave home. In order to escape from Sunny Point, these grown Argyles would have to get rid of their mother. Eventually one of them did, or did they.
By the time of publication, Christie had been writing mysteries for decades. Perhaps she needed a break from her go to sleuths Poirot and Miss Marple. In 1960, readers discovered that two years prior Jack Argyle had been charged with murdering his mother and eventually died in jail. The family, or at least Leo, mourned his wife, and the siblings were ok with what happened because Jack or Jack-o had a mean streak to him. If he had murdered mother, so be it. One evening Donald Calgary turns up at Sunny Point and provides Jack with an alibi. The time of death occurred within a half hour’s time so it had to have been someone in the house, a family member or employee. This case reminds me of a Poirot case when someone in the family murdered the patriarch because he was a detestable person, and all heirs stood to gain financially by his death. In this case, Rachel Argyle also provided to her children in trusts, but she doted on all her children as though they were her own. Don Calgary believed that because he did not come forward two years prior with information, that he owed it to the family to deduce whodunnit. Not all the Argyles were happy with this new revelation, but Calgary as well as police detective Huish desired to bring the murderer to justice.
Don Calgary is hardly Hercule Poirot. He is charming and even from this first case appears to be a lady’s man. After the murder he participated on the Hayes Bentley expedition to the South Pole, so he is also a man of the world. One thing that sets Poirot apart is his use of little gray cells. He knew whodunnit long before the reader and only needed clues in order to piece together a timeline. After reading more than half of the Poirot cases I still have not solved a case before the Belgian sleuth. In this case I deduced the criminal from the get go and I have an inkling that Calgary did as well. He kept detective to be sure who the guilty party was but also because he quickly developed feelings for Hester Argyle. The whole case became far fetched too quickly for my liking and I only kept reading to see if my premonitions were correct and also so I could check this book off of my challenge. Perhaps, Dame Christie needed a break from her intellectually savvy Poirot cases, or perhaps she wanted to write something different. In many of her postwar cases she appeared ahead of her time from a social aspect when she discussed how the world changed. In one book she noted that women returning from war could not find jobs. Here, she addressed adoption and whether parents and children still loved each other as though they were flesh and blood. Today this was commonplace but in that era, or at least in this case, these things were not discussed until the children were much older. All these factors contributed to a case that became a break from Christie’s norm, pointing to her depth as a writer.
With work starting tomorrow I still hope to have plenty of reading time. I enjoyed my vacations and the depth and breadth of reading that I partook in. One highlight of my year has been rediscovering the Queen of Crime. I have read enough of Poirot and Miss Marple to know how they operate on a case. What makes Dame Christie stand out is her knowledge or poisons and utilizing the experiences of her life to create a diverse body of work. Some of her stand alone novels work as spy thrillers or spooky mysteries and some are silly. Ordeal by Innocence falls somewhat in the middle in that aspects of the case still spoke to Christie’s skills as a writers, but other aspects of the case seemed out of place. What resulted was a fast paced whodunnit with the backdrop of passion. I still have four books left in the Read Christie challenge and hope to read a variety of books. Dame Christie was the queen of crime for her wide range of situations that could occur in a mystery. I hope the next case I read is a touch more realistic.
3.5 stars