I hadn’t intended to read these consecutively, but they were different enough from one another that I felt I was reading a new author each time or nearly enough so that I didn’t burnout on this.
Murder at the Vicarage is the first book in the Jane Marple series. Since I plan to read the entire series, and since this was the only place where I could find the book, I used this five-novel collection to start my adventures with the aged spinster. And I enjoyed it.
Someone murders Colonel Protheroe, and lots of people had good reasons for it. His daughter, Lettice, could have done it, but his adulterous wife had lots more reasons to do it, as did her lover, Lawrence. This is a good introduction to not only Miss Marple but the vicar and his unconventional wife and their slovenly housemaid.
In Dead Man’s Folly, Poirot’s long-time friend Ariadne Oliver is hosting a murder hunt. She charges people to find a murdered person based on clues she provides. It’s a harmless fundraiser until a 14-year-old girl becomes a real murder victim. Naturally, Poirot eventually figures it out, but not before other deaths mount up.
I’ve reviewed Sad Cypress already, so I won’t rehash that.
In Toward Zero, an inspector deals with the aftermath of a tense vacation wherein a man, his ex-wife, and his current wife all vacate together. Lots of tension; lots of death.
N Or M? is my favorite book in the collection. World War II is underway, and middle-aged detectives Tommy and Tuppence Baresford grumble that there’s nothing for them to do because of their age to assist their government, unlike the last world war. Wow does that all change. The government seeks a spy couple, and it’s up to the Beresfords to determine whether N or M is at the same hotel-type place where they’re staying. Things get way tense toward the end when a German spy clanks Tommy in the head with a hammer.