I have never read a novel by Agatha Christie.
Sure I’ve watched documentaries about her, and about her nervous breakdown when she ran away to Harrogate after crashing her car, read about her experiences working in a hospital pharmacy during world war one, marvelled at her love of surfing, but never have I read a novel by her.
I was never a Poirot fan, but I have watched the odd BBC dramatisation of Miss Marple stories, and I once did see a film version of the Murder on the Orient Express on a long flight between somewhere and somwhere else. But I have never read a novel by her.
Until last night.
We’ve been having a minor crisis – J has had a minor surgical procedure at one of the big city hospitals and the idea was that she had the procedure in the morning, they discharged her late in the afternoon, I took her in a cab back to the short term rental apartment we’d rented close to the city, fed her pasta and then we drove back the next day after checking out.
Didn’t happen. As is the way of hospitals they pushed her surgery back to the afternoon and then decided as she came out of the recovery suite so late in the day she had better stay in overnight to make sure that the incisons closed up properly.
So I ended up with a microwave dinner and a glass of wine on my own.
The apartment came with a subscription to various tv sports channels plus the usual range of free to air channels.
I’d exhausted the possibilities of free to air tv by half past eight, and wall to wall footie didn’t appeal (I think there might have been some ice hockey as well, but I didn’t really look).
That gave me a problem. I’d finished reading my book during the day while waiting for the hospital to call and it was too early to go to bed, so on a whim I downloaded the project Gutenberg edition of Agatha Christie’s The man in the brown suit with no real expectations.
And I made a discovery.
It’s clever and witty. Yes it’s a story very much of its time, very much a 1920s period piece, but entertaining, and to be quite honest, like many such books if they are well written tell you more about the lives of people in 1920s England than a hundred learned tomes.
Yes, Agatha Christie does write about middle class and upper middle class people who could afford maids and other servants, might own a motor car, yet lived ina precarious manner on shares and investments, who often rented houses rather than owning them and who formed a middle class precariat who always aspired to be something more.
You never know, I might turn into an Agatha Christie addict …




















