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11 replies
Marc_Anton on 25 Nov 2008 at 12:32 p.m. GMT
I think we can be critical too. The genre Christie excels in often expects us to accept certain situations and solutions that go against our normal logic. So it is interesting to find out where Christie crosses the line of 'reality'.
In my opinion the one novel where the Nursery Rhyme is used to its full advantage is And Then There Were None. Here the rhyme really operates as the machine of the plot.
Other novels use a variation on this (A Pocket Full of Rye); a murder scheme follows the pattern of the rhyme. In books like One Two, Buckle my Shoe the verses are used only as chapter heads. They (loosely) fit and follow the plot. It is always remarkable that the only one in the books who spots a resemblance between the rhyme and the events around the murder is Poirot himself. Since when is he so familiar with English nursery rhymes?
The same with Hickory, Dickory Dock though (if my memory serves me right) not even Poirot mentions this rhyme; it is used only as an intro and to give the book a title.
GKCfan on 25 Nov 2008 at 4:05 p.m. GMT
detectivepauljohn on 26 Nov 2008 at 9:21 a.m. GMT
And Then There Were None is the nursery rhyme of Ten Little I. One by one, they begin to die
Five Little Pigs...about five suspects?
Hickory Dickory Dock
It shouldn't be in the Marple section anyway. It should be in non-series books and characters.
squatty on 26 Nov 2008 at 7:23 p.m. GMT
Marc_Anton on 27 Nov 2008 at 9:14 a.m. GMT
HarleyBarley on 28 Nov 2008 at 3:50 a.m. GMT
GKCfan on 29 Nov 2008 at 9:14 p.m. GMT
HarleyBarley on 30 Nov 2008 at 8 a.m. GMT
pghfan on 02 Dec 2008 at 9:26 p.m. GMT
squatty on 07 Dec 2008 at 11:37 a.m. GMT
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I've posted this in the Marple section but it could quite as easily have gone in the Poirot section.
I am undecided about AC's use of nursery rhymes in many of her books. Sometimes, they seem to add something to the plot, whilst on other occassions they feel terribly forced.
For example, I've never quite understood the use of Sing A Song of Sixpence in A Pocketful of Rye. I found that the rhyme helped me guess the solution quite early on. Why would the murderer draw attention to themselves in such an obvious way? The connection with the blackbird mine may never have been made if it hadn't been for the murderer signposting their crimes in that direction.
Another example is Five Little Pigs. Trying to fit the five suspects into the nursery rhyme is very contrived.
This sounds like a critical post, and its not because there are many times when I find the use quaint and amusing.
What do others think?