Christie never intended Miss Marple to rival Poirot in the publics affections, but this spinster sleuth soon proved a hit with the public. Here's the place to discuss her stories - but beware spoilers!
If you can't find your favourite Miss Marple story, don't worry - more will be added shortly.
Warning: These discussions may contain spoilers!
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I would love to go to a hotel like this. Sounds so comfortable...
This is one of my faves. The setting, and that characters are so unexpected... I thought the recent adaptation was fantastic too...
Read more about this story:
At Bertram's Hotel
I agree withboth of you detective conan and alisonevans5
Very interesting book to read before sleep. I would also love to go to such a hotel.
I watched the Joan Hickson version of At Bertram's hotel, I thought it was better than the book. It cut down out the long parts, made it more fast paced and exciting. Yet it never went too far from away from the book. I thought Bess was excellently cast.
In fact eveyone was very good, except the racing car driver. Clearly not Italian. What a rat, dating a mother and daughter, at the same time! We never find out what happened to him, but presumably he went to prison.
Elvira's friend Bridget was actually in the drama, but only briefly. I liked the way that they made the hotel look like a place you'd want to stay in. All those lovely cream cakes, smart waiters and stylish decor. The one in the McEwan version I wouldn't have wanted to stay at. Nazis, art fraudsters, murderers and jewel thieves all under one roof!
I think it is one of the best Marple's with Joan Hickson. I really liked it and the hotel setting is great. The italian race driver is not well cast, he's obviously not italian, but that is something you see often in Marple and Poirot series.
The only thing I can say in the Geraldine McKewan version is the opening short where someone mentions a song Title "Miss Otis Regrets she's unable to Lunch today" If you weren't listening too hard you would miss it.
McEwan: It's odd because Bertam's is supposed to be unchanged since Miss Marple's youth. But there's jazz bands playing, which werent around when she was a young girl.
A great book. Even though I know Agatha Christie never really wanted to bring Poirot and Miss Marple together in a novel, I think she may have been able to pull it off in this one because Miss Marple didn't seem to do much except add to the commentary; the detective work was mostly done by Inspector Davy.
I think she does enough to justify her being in it Unlike her involvement in The Moving Finger, I don't understand your point about Poirot and Miss Marple being in a book together Miss Quin
I think compared to some of the other Marples, she does have a more equal relationship with the detective. She doesn't solve the whole thing. Whearas in other stories, the Inspector are made to look foolish. But Miss marple is in this book alot, it's just at a slower pace.
I agree, MissQuin.Especially Inspector Japp,my heart goes out to him every time MM gets in his way!The actor playing that character in Hickson 's adapts is hilarious.
About the book now, I mostly enjoyed the descriptions of meals and the hotel 's nostalgic, old fashioned atmosphere.It would be my dream come true, to find a place like this-I would be willing to defy all kinds of dangers in order to have my tea there every day!
I found Elvira extremely repulsive, a real female Rasputin, under that veil of beauty, good upbringing and innocence.Oh, it felt so good when MM exposed her in the end and she got what she deserved!
It wasn't actually Insepctor Japp. Chief Inspector Davy of Scotland Yard, who in the JH adapt, was played by an actor who played Inspector Wexford!
No I didn't like Elvira and suspected her all along. She has many of her mother's characteristics, but whereas her mother's rash, Elvira's calculating.
If there's one thing I didn't like about Bertam's is there was murder, but only really three suspects, which wasn't enough to make it gripping for me. But the identity fraud story was very clever and ahead of it's time.
I know, I was referring to Japp in general, not in this book.
xrysoulaI agree, MissQuin.Especially Inspector Japp,my heart goes out to him every time MM gets in his way!The actor playing that character in Hickson 's adapts is hilarious.
So whose MM? I thought you meant Miss marple, you mean Poirot? No, Japp doesn't do very well with the cases. It's a wonder he's head of Scotland yard.
MissQuin-Whereas in other stories, the Inspectors are made to look foolish.
I was referring to other MM stories, where Japp appears.
If you are talking about the Miss Marple stories, xrysoula, then I think you mean Inspector Slack and not Inspector Japp. Japp only appeared with Poirot and was mentioned once in the first Tommy and Tuppence book.
Oh,right you are Puffinjill, I mixed up those two names.And I was wondering why noone seemed to understand what I was talking about!Thank you so much.I will try to be more careful in the future.Sorry, MissQuin.
Ten people, each with something to hide and something to fear, are invited to a lonely mansion on Soldier Island by a host who, surprisingly, fails to appear.
When the wealthy patriarch, Aristide, is murdered, suspicion falls on the whole household. ...
Travelling on the Orient Express, Poirot is approached by a desperate American. Afraid that someone plans to kill him, Ratchett asks Poirot for help ...
Masthead Photography: Joan Hickson image © BBC
MURDER MOST FOUL © Turner Entertainment Co. A Warner Bros. Entertainment Company. All Rights Reserved.
AGATHA CHRISTIE® POIROT® MARPLE® Copyright ©2009 Agatha Christie Limited. All rights reserved.
Bertram's Hotel in London is such a wonderfully old-fashioned hotel that Miss Marple's nephew feels very happy to send his aunt to stay there for a holiday. After all, what could possibly happen in such a gentle and staid place? With the arrival of the whirlwind that is Bess Sedgwick it seems a lot could happen, not the least of which is the appearance of Bess's estranged daughter Elivra Blake. Both women seem to be involved with the same charismatic man and that can only lead to trouble ... Miss Marple observes all this from the sidelines, but when a clergyman goes missing and a murder is committed, it is time for her to impart her wisdom to Chief Inspector Davy of Scotland Yard.
Christie was in her seventies when she wrote this story but does that show in her comments on contemporary life? Is she able to capture what it was like to be as young as Elvira and Bridget? Do Miss Marple's observations on modern life reflect Christie's own opinions?