The Seven Dials Mystery by Agatha Christie
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
I read this book many years ago as a teen when I was in my Christie phase. I remember being annoyed with it because it appeared to be ripping off P.G. Wodehouse. There were the typical Wodehousian characters in situations where people were actually being killed! Re-reading it this month, I decided it was more an homage to Wodehouse. And even though I'd read it before, I guessed wrong. That's what's so wonderful about having a poor memory; a few months/years later, and it's almost a whole new book!
If you read this, look for the characters comparable to Jeeves and Wooster and to Lord Emsworth. If the subtleties don't pop out at you, Lord Coote's secretary, the Efficient Bateman is clearly the Efficient Baxter. Of course, Baxter would never have the nickname "Pongo," but there is a Pongo Twistleton in Wodehouse.
Christie says she was intending something lighthearted (aside from murder, of course, which is not that frothy) and while she isn't Wodehouse, she does succeed. There are several charming and humorous scenes, such as George's proposal to Bundle and Lady Coote's demeanor at the bridge table. If you obsess too much with the Wodehouse connection, as I did in my early read of the book, you might find the murders and genuine danger incongruous. Taken by itself, though, it's a cracking read.
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