We rely on your support to help us keep producing beautiful, free, and unrestricted editions of literature for the digital age. Will you support our efforts with a donation ? Not much happens in the sleepy rural town of St. Mary Mead—but that all changes when Colonel Protheroe, a "pompous old brute," is murdered while awaiting the Vicar in the vicarage study. The main problem isn't the paucity of suspects—in this case, there seem to be too many willing to confess to the crime. The Vicar, who narrates the story, does his best to unravel the mystery himself, as the police seem not to be making a very good job of it. His investigation soon begins to benefit from the observations of his neighbor, a gossipy old spinster by the name of Miss Marple . This wasn't Miss Marple's first fictional appearance: she had played a part in an Agatha Christie short story three years earlier. Miss Marple went on to become one of Christie's most enduring and endearing characters, portrayed in many adaptations for television, stage, and film. Agatha Christie (died 1976) was a significant literary figure of the 20th century. Their work has endured across generations and continues to be read and studied worldwide. As a work of classic literary fiction, The Murder At The Vicarage exemplifies the narrative craft and social insight that defined great storytelling of its era. Literary fiction of this period was characterized by careful attention to character psychology, social milieu, and the moral questions that animated public discourse.
























Karoliina
10.3.2026
Vähän pitkäveteinen
Milla
18.9.2022
Agatha Christie really is the master - she understands perfectly how to set the scene, clues, red herrings and the characters. She always introduces shades of grey: sometimes people do the wrong things for right reasons, sometimes they are foolish and good-hearted. The backdrop is the sleepy village of St Mary Meade and the pre-war English upper and middle class society where letters and visitations and dinners and servants are common and jobs not so much. I can't tell if it's nostalgia that makes this so appealing to me, but the characters work, the plot works - and in the centre is the gentle and adorably nosy Miss Marple who not only is probably the most intelligent person in the village but also a great judge of character and human nature. A lot of this is very cliched by now - fumbling police detective, multitude of secrets that don't really matter, presentation of hints and clues and the neat conclusion that ties it up in the end. But this is where it started, and it's really hard to find anyone who rivals it. For the audiobook - Richard E Grant is simply divine, couldn't ask for more.
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