Murder and mystery lurk in the hills and on the shores of Devon and Cornwall in this new Special Edition Hardback of Agatha Christie’s finest countryside stories.
Growing up in Torquay, Agatha Christie’s love of the West Country never left her and many of her finest stories are set on the moors and shores of Devon and Cornwall. This collection celebrates some of her finest countryside stories featuring a cast of Christie’s most iconic Hercule Poirot, Miss Jane Marple, Tommy and Tuppence Beresford and Parker Pyne.
Also included in this story, published in its original form over a century after it first appeared in The Sketch magazine, join Poirot and Hastings as they solve a grisly murder in The Adventure of the Dartmoor Bungalow.
Dame Agatha Mary Clarissa Christie, Lady Mallowan, DBE (née Miller) was an English writer known for her 66 detective novels and 14 short story collections, particularly those revolving around fictional detectives Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. She also wrote the world's longest-running play, the murder mystery The Mousetrap, which has been performed in the West End of London since 1952. A writer during the "Golden Age of Detective Fiction", Christie has been called the "Queen of Crime". She also wrote six novels under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott. In 1971, she was made a Dame (DBE) by Queen Elizabeth II for her contributions to literature. Guinness World Records lists Christie as the best-selling fiction writer of all time, her novels having sold more than two billion copies.
This best-selling author of all time wrote 66 crime novels and story collections, fourteen plays, and six novels under a pseudonym in romance. Her books sold more than a billion copies in the English language and a billion in translation. According to Index Translationum, people translated her works into 103 languages at least, the most for an individual author. Of the most enduring figures in crime literature, she created Hercule Poirot and Miss Jane Marple. She atuhored The Mousetrap, the longest-running play in the history of modern theater.
A nice collection of Agatha Christie short stories, most first published in the 1920s. Despite their age there are plenty of great stories here, including quite a few featuring Hercule Poirot. Although the book cover claims these are "Twelve Devonshire Mysteries" some of them are actually set in Cornwall. Now that IS a mystery!
Nette Kurzgeschichten von Christie. Der Titel ist vielleicht irreführend, da es sich nach dem Untertitel eher um Geschichten die in Devonshire spielen handeln.
Die Geschichten spiegeln hier aber die große Vielfalt von Christie wieder. Es geht um eingeredete Suizide, geisterhafte Geschichten, religiöse Kulte und Geheimbundverschwörungen. Die Bandbreite von Christies Oeufre wird in dieser Kurzgeschichtensammlung gut abgebildet.
Einzig kritisieren muss ich, dass es mir beim Lesen bei einigen Geschichten schwer viel, wach zu bleiben.
A wonderful collection of short stories from the pen of Agatha Christie. Many of the these twelve mysteries have appeared in previous volumes and most can be found as individual ebooks.
At 99p Country Christie was a real bargain and gave me access to seven previously unread stories. The link for these stories to be placed together in one edition is that they centre on Devon and Cornwall. Devon was a clear joy for the writer and a further bonus is her recounting of Torquay as a child regarding garden parties and the Regatta is a pure delight.
There is a good splattering of favourites included. Tales with Poirot and Miss Marple taking the lead will always grab the attention. There are also wider themes which reflect the beauty of these locations and Christie’s other interests.
None really stand out but Poirot, Hastings and Japp make the pages come alive and an introduction to Miss Marple and “The Tuesday Night Club” discussions.
A collection of short stories that has you nipping to the library to borrow Agatha Christie or looking out for books in charity shops involving her famous characters is a good investment. Someday soon I will read the main novels in publication order and share Poirot’s journey and Miss Marple’s associations with examples of village life and character links to St Mary Mead.
A fairly pleasing selection of Agatha Christie short stories, although obviously nothing new. Poirot and Miss Marple are here, together with Mr Parker Pyne and a few stand alones. I was both pleased and surprised to find one story (The Edge) that I do remember ever reading before, so that was a pleasant surprise
The latest in HarperCollins’ series of themed collections of Agatha Christie’s short stories, this serves as a companion to their recent Capital Christie. Most of the twelve stories in this one are set in or near Christie’s beloved Devon, and as usual, they include all of her most famous ‘tecs – Poirot, Miss Marple and Tommy and Tuppence Beresford. There’s also a Parker Pyne story, though surprisingly no Harley Quin this time. As an added bonus, there is the usual extract from Christie’s autobiography, acting as an introduction. In this one, she paints a brief but vivid picture of attending the annual Regatta fair in Torquay as a child. The book is gorgeously designed as always – colourful, with foil highlights and appropriate endpapers, this time with a pattern of ducks’ footprints as a delightful contrast to the pigeons’ footprints in the Capital collection. Clearly a lot of thought goes into the design of these, and it shows. I always think they would make great gifts (especially for yourself).
It always surprises me that in every collection there are a few stories I’ve either never read or read so long ago they’ve been erased from my memory banks. This one had a particularly high number – eight out of the twelve – so that’s always extra fun. The stories I did know were all worth re-reading too – taken mostly from three of her better-known collections, Partners in Crime, The Thirteen Problems (aka The Tuesday Club Murders), and The Labours of Hercules. A couple of the stories have appeared in earlier books in this hardback series, but that would only be an issue for someone who’d collected them all, and really, it’s never a penance to read these stories again.
Of the twelve stories, I gave seven of them four stars, four got five stars, and one lagged a little behind on three. So overall this is an excellent collection filled with good stories and no real duds. Here’s a flavour of some of the ones I enjoyed most:
Double Sin – Poirot and Hastings are on holiday in Devon, and decide to travel by coach to visit a friend. On the coach is a rather garrulous young woman, who tells them all about how she works for her aunt who owns a successful antiques shop. The young woman is carrying a set of valuable miniatures to show to a prospective client. But by the end of the journey the miniatures are gone! Good fun – Hastings plus a pretty young woman always guarantees humour and much Poirot-twinkling – and a good plot too in this one.
The Hound of Death – the title story from Christie’s excellent collection of horror/supernatural stories, a genre I always wish she’d done more of. Our narrator hears a story about an atrocity during the war, when Germans attacked a convent in Belgium. But as they entered, an explosion destroyed both the soldiers and the convent, and left a mark in the shape of a giant hound on the ruined walls. One of the nuns came to England as a refugee, in a state of shock that put her under the care of the local doctor. All she remembers is calling on a mysterious power of destruction. The doctor hypnotises her and then she remembers an ancient religion which could harness powers now long forgotten. The doctor becomes fascinated and obsessed… This is a very dark story, drawing on the horror of war, and also on mankind’s eternal search for destructive powers. Spookily scary—great stuff! One of my top favourite Christie stories (scared the bejabers out of me when I first read it as a teen!), and if you haven’t read it, I highly recommend that you do!
The Flock of Geryon – Miss Carnaby is troubled, so takes her problem to Poirot. He knows her as having been a petty criminal in the past, now reformed. Miss Carnaby is worried about a friend, a well-off but lonely middle-aged woman who has been sucked into a small religious sect, headed by a man known as the Great Shepherd. Miss Carnaby suspects it’s all a ‘ramp’—a scam. Poirot and she agree that she will go undercover, joining the sect and pretending that she has just come into money. There’s a lot of suspense and peril in this story, but it’s also full of humour. Miss Carnaby is a great character!
The Edge – Clare Halliwell has known Sir Gerald Lee most of their lives and has always expected to marry him. But suddenly he returns from a trip, married to a woman called Vivien Harper, whom nobody knows. (Which, of course, is code for her not being of the right class.) Some time later, Clare learns that Vivien is having an affair. Pretending to herself that she’s taking the moral high ground, Clare decides not to tell Gerald. Instead she lets Vivien know she knows, and tortures her with subtle hints in front of Gerald and threats to reveal all. Another very dark story – not a mystery, more a psychological study of a cruel personality, warped even further by jealousy. Great characterisation in this one!
It’s the range and variety in Christie’s short stories that I love. Don’t dare tell me that she writes to a formula! If you still think she does, read some of these collections, and then come back and humbly beg pardon… 😉
NB This book was provided for review by the publisher, HarperCollins.
"The Plymouth Express" - 3 ⭐️ "The Unbreakable Alibi" - 2 ⭐️ "The Case of the Missing Will" - 3 ⭐️ "Ingots of Gold" - 2 ⭐️ "Double Sin" - 2 ⭐️ "The Hound of Death" - 4 🌟 "The Cornish Mystery" - 4 🌟 "The Regatta Mystery" - 3 ⭐️ "The Flock of Geryon" - 3 ⭐️ "The Edge" - 4 🌟 "The Bloodstained Pavement" - 4 🌟 "The Adventure of the Dartmoor Bungalow" 3.5 🌟
an intro where Christie recalls the fair at torquay, coconut shies, and so on
The Plymouth Express - read by David Suchet - who does a passable Insp Japp imitation. Rich woman found stabbed under the seat in a rail car.
The Unbreakable Alibi - read by Hugh Fraser (tommy & tuppence). An absolute tosser makes a bet with an Australian girl that he can’t break her ‘alibi’.
The Case of the Missing Will - if you are so clever, then find my will otherwise it all goes to charity. She is so clever, she just hires Poirot to find it for her. Hastings thinks that’s cheating, but Poirot is tickled pink.
Ingots of Gold - Miss Marple pats Raymond on the head for being so so naïve, “perhaps it is the author bit, dear… there is no Spanish bullion, you foolish man.”
Double Sin - buses, overcharging fares, and stolen mini portraits.
The Hound of Death - read by Christopher Lee… the perfect voice for it - a nun uses her mind powers to blow up the Germans in WWI - but her new doctor is a little too interested in her skills.
The Cornish Mystery - Poirot - a woman comes to ask if her husband is poisoning her, but by the time they get to her home the next day, she’s dead… and poisoned. But did the husband really do it?
The Regatta Mystery - one of the Parker Pyne stories… and honestly, you deserve to lose it if you drag a giant diamond around as your ‘lucky charm and wave it at everyone!
The Flock of Geryon - one of the labours of Hercules, and a super interesting story - a cult where rich lonely women leave their fortune to the cult, but die in ways that are assumed to be natural… but are they?
The Edge - quite dark, and really interesting when Olivia tends to lose track of her revenge.
The Bloodstained Pavement - points to Joyce here for her keen observiness; and for trusting her gut.
The Adventure of the Dartmoor Bungalow - later part of the Big Four novel which is not one of my favourites…
The subtitle here is “Twelve Devonshire Mysteries”, but in fact several of them are set in Cornwall rather than Devon – just warning anyone who is expecting Dumnonian exactitude. The stories were originally published between 1923 and 1940 – Agatha Christie’s peak – in a variety of different magazines and collections, and they feature individually Poirot, Miss Marple, Parker Pyne and Tommy and Tuppence, so a decent sampling from across the spectrum of her protagonists. The collection was assembled between hard covers only last year.
One story, “The Hound of Death“, is not about crime at all but a horror story involving a Belgian nun in Cornwall. There is a foreword, extracted from her autobiography, about Agatha Christie’s love of Torquay. Some of the short stories depend on an obvious twist, but the point is more about Christie’s convincing portrayal of the West Country’s landscape and society than the actual plot. Worth it for the Christie fan.
An Agatha Christie collection does not disappoint; as a casual Christie reader all of the stories were new to me. Poirot is the most frequently featured, which both pleased and didn't surprise me, and there are a couple of Marple stories. Most are pretty straightforward crime solvers, although there are one or two more that lean more towards psychological suspense, such as The Edge, which was pretty dark. While I suppose the theme of being set in the country was consistent, and a couple (again, The Edge) featured prominent markers of Cornwall, the places were overall fairly bland and nonspecific to the plots. I think my library will still buy this, though, because the old lady still circulates like crazy. Thanks to netgalley and the publisher for the arc! Mass Center for the Book reading challenge for April: a short story or essay collection.
Country Christie is a collection of Agatha Christie’s short stories set in the English countryside, where quiet villages and peaceful landscapes hide secrets and crime. The rural settings create a strong contrast between calm appearances and dark motives, adding to the suspense.
The anthology features a mix of familiar detectives, including Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple, as well as standalone characters. Despite their short length, the stories are well-constructed and often end with clever twists. While some plots may feel familiar to long-time readers, the overall quality remains high.
Overall, Country Christie is an enjoyable and accessible collection that highlights Christie’s talent for creating engaging mysteries in deceptively tranquil settings.
Having enjoyed Poirot and Miss Marple as TV productions but never having actually read any Agatha Christie I was interested in this. It was good to get short stories that were quite different from each other after I'd read a few reasonably intense books. Some of the stories were excellent, some I wondered what the point was. Considering the time these were written they are thought provoking and fascinating. I'm really pleased I had the chance to read these and because the stories are short enough to be read easily it is something I am happy to recommend.
A nice little collection of stories compiled from previous collections, all set in Devon or Cornwall. Some reliably good Miss Marple & Poirot tales that you may already know, a couple of stories with a more psychological edge - plus a truly terrible Tommy & Tuppence tale that
***SPOILER ALERT***
…breaks one of the rules of golden age detective fiction just when you’re hoping for a clever solution.
Country Christie is quite an enjoyable collection of short stories by Agatha Christie, featuring Miss Marple and her nephew Raymond West, Hercule Poirot and Captain Hastings, Tommy and Tuppence, and Parker Pyne. 🚂 Some, such as The Hound of Death, I had read in other anthologies, but this made them no less enjoyable. 🚂 My favourite story in this collection was The Bloodstained Pavement. 🚂 I read this title on BorrowBox.
I love these little short story collections that combine Christie's stories in a new format. You've got standalones, Poirot, Marple, Tommy&Tuppence, and Parker Pyne all in one book. Plus of course the cover is beautiful. Great for someone who wants an introduction to Christie to pick a character to start with, or for longtime fans who want to read the stories again in a new context.
Like every child in a former British colony who grew up as a reader, I cannot resist a Christie novel. But she truly sucks, imo, at the short story. The ones that work best here are the slightly gothic, psychological thriller ones. I could read more in the vein of "The Edge".
An enjoyable collection of stories, I really enjoyed the variety of stories, it was also interesting to read a few of Christie’s non-mystery based stories.