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Buy Death on the Nile: B1 (Collins Agatha Christie ELT Readers) by Christie (ISBN: 9780008249687) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Review: Christie’s greatest novel? - While dining one day in London, Hercule Poirot notices two young people at a nearby table, obviously in love. However, he thinks, trouble may be on the horizon for it is obvious to him that the woman loves the man to the point almost of obsession, whereas his love seems cooler. Some months later, Poirot is about to embark on a river cruise along the Nile when he discovers that these same two young people are to be among his fellow passengers, and he learns their names – Jacqueline de Bellefort and Simon Doyle. But he is disturbed to discover that they are no longer a couple. Simon is honeymooning with his new bride, the wealthy heiress Linnet Ridgeway, and Jacqueline seems to be in a state of nervous jealousy, stalking the newlyweds and trying to ruin their happiness. Poirot fears the worst, and the worst duly happens. Linnet Ridgeway is found dead in her cabin, shot through the head. But Jacqueline, the obvious suspect, has an unshakeable alibi for the time of death. So Poirot must look elsewhere for people with motives to kill Linnet, and it soon appears there are many possibilities. Linnet’s wealth and beauty had given her a kind of arrogance and carelessness towards other people, and several of the passengers had reason to hate her… This is probably my favourite Christie of them all – it’s certainly the one I recommend most often to people new to her work. That’s because it has all the ingredients that make her work a joy – an exotic location, a closed circle of people all beautifully characterised and all with credible motives and/or acting suspiciously, an element of the howdunit but keeping it within the bounds of possibility, a complex plot that never crosses the credibility line, a touch of romance, Poirot on top form, showing his empathy for those who have been unfairly treated or are in trouble, and all the clues given for any reader with a mind devious enough to spot them. Most of her books have several of these elements, but this one has them all. Add to this Jacqueline de Bellefort, one of the most attractive and appealing characters in all of her books, and an ending which satisfies on every level, and this is about as close to perfection as a mystery novel can get. The setting is an excellent element in this one. Christie knew Egypt well through her archaeologist husband, and she uses the background of some of the monuments of the ancient world brilliantly to add atmosphere and to, in a sense, show how little and fleeting are the concerns of the tourists who flock to them. The cruise passengers vary from those who have a passionate interest in the history of the place to those who are here merely because it is somewhere else to see – another tick on their list of places to visit as they attempt to fill their rather empty lives. The cast of characters is pretty huge – around a dozen passengers, I think, and a couple of servants, plus Poirot and his old friend Colonel Race who, being in the region, has been asked to take over the investigation. Each of the passengers has his or her own story, and Christie is great at giving them all full personalities – so often in vintage mysteries a lot of the characters are just there to be moved around like chess pieces, providing alibis or being witnesses, but Christie never does this. So in this one we have a young woman trying to cope with an alcoholic mother, a young man with socialist tendencies, raging against the rich while happily participating in a luxury cruise, a naive girl thrilled by the whole experience which she can only have because she has been brought along as an unpaid skivvy to a demanding, selfish old lady. There are men with murky reasons to be aboard, which the reader has some knowledge of but the other passengers don’t, and women who are torn between admiration of Linnet’s beauty and jealousy of her seemingly charmed life. As well as solving the mystery, Christie has to make sure the reader is satisfied with the outcomes for all these people she has made us care about. And very soon this reader had a list of people she hoped were guilty and a longer list of people she hoped weren’t. But with Christie you can always be confident that the solution will not be what you expect. There are lots of books that could make a claim to be Christie’s greatest, but for me this one makes the strongest claim of all. A true classic of the genre. Review: Certainly one of Christie's best novels - Christie states in the introduction to my copy of Death on the Nile that she considers it the best of Poirot's overseas adventures, and so I started reading prepared to hold her to this claim. I was not disappointed. There are a lot of characters to get your head round, which paints a large and realistic picture of the Nile holiday. This story contains one of the biggest build-ups I think I've read in a crime novel - the first half of the text being background and set-up, but it pays off. My one criticism of this otherwise excellent book is that I worked it out straight away, although I must confess I did miss one detail which formed part of the final explanation. As much as Christie's later narrative tried to throw me off the scent, I found it a little disappointing that I wasn't challenged more. Given that this is the first time this has happened though, it might just be a fluke! Certainly one of Christie's best novels and one I would recommend to anyone wanting a sample of her work (rather than wanting to read the entire canon like me!).
| Best Sellers Rank | 293,719 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 105 in English Language Readers 292 in Language Readers Reference 435 in English as a Foreign Language Exams |
| Book 18 of 38 | Hercule Poirot |
| Customer reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (16,656) |
| Dimensions | 0.76 x 12.45 x 19.3 cm |
| ISBN-10 | 0008249687 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0008249687 |
| Item weight | 1.05 kg |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 96 pages |
| Publication date | 5 Oct. 2017 |
| Publisher | Collins Reference |
F**N
Christie’s greatest novel?
While dining one day in London, Hercule Poirot notices two young people at a nearby table, obviously in love. However, he thinks, trouble may be on the horizon for it is obvious to him that the woman loves the man to the point almost of obsession, whereas his love seems cooler. Some months later, Poirot is about to embark on a river cruise along the Nile when he discovers that these same two young people are to be among his fellow passengers, and he learns their names – Jacqueline de Bellefort and Simon Doyle. But he is disturbed to discover that they are no longer a couple. Simon is honeymooning with his new bride, the wealthy heiress Linnet Ridgeway, and Jacqueline seems to be in a state of nervous jealousy, stalking the newlyweds and trying to ruin their happiness. Poirot fears the worst, and the worst duly happens. Linnet Ridgeway is found dead in her cabin, shot through the head. But Jacqueline, the obvious suspect, has an unshakeable alibi for the time of death. So Poirot must look elsewhere for people with motives to kill Linnet, and it soon appears there are many possibilities. Linnet’s wealth and beauty had given her a kind of arrogance and carelessness towards other people, and several of the passengers had reason to hate her… This is probably my favourite Christie of them all – it’s certainly the one I recommend most often to people new to her work. That’s because it has all the ingredients that make her work a joy – an exotic location, a closed circle of people all beautifully characterised and all with credible motives and/or acting suspiciously, an element of the howdunit but keeping it within the bounds of possibility, a complex plot that never crosses the credibility line, a touch of romance, Poirot on top form, showing his empathy for those who have been unfairly treated or are in trouble, and all the clues given for any reader with a mind devious enough to spot them. Most of her books have several of these elements, but this one has them all. Add to this Jacqueline de Bellefort, one of the most attractive and appealing characters in all of her books, and an ending which satisfies on every level, and this is about as close to perfection as a mystery novel can get. The setting is an excellent element in this one. Christie knew Egypt well through her archaeologist husband, and she uses the background of some of the monuments of the ancient world brilliantly to add atmosphere and to, in a sense, show how little and fleeting are the concerns of the tourists who flock to them. The cruise passengers vary from those who have a passionate interest in the history of the place to those who are here merely because it is somewhere else to see – another tick on their list of places to visit as they attempt to fill their rather empty lives. The cast of characters is pretty huge – around a dozen passengers, I think, and a couple of servants, plus Poirot and his old friend Colonel Race who, being in the region, has been asked to take over the investigation. Each of the passengers has his or her own story, and Christie is great at giving them all full personalities – so often in vintage mysteries a lot of the characters are just there to be moved around like chess pieces, providing alibis or being witnesses, but Christie never does this. So in this one we have a young woman trying to cope with an alcoholic mother, a young man with socialist tendencies, raging against the rich while happily participating in a luxury cruise, a naive girl thrilled by the whole experience which she can only have because she has been brought along as an unpaid skivvy to a demanding, selfish old lady. There are men with murky reasons to be aboard, which the reader has some knowledge of but the other passengers don’t, and women who are torn between admiration of Linnet’s beauty and jealousy of her seemingly charmed life. As well as solving the mystery, Christie has to make sure the reader is satisfied with the outcomes for all these people she has made us care about. And very soon this reader had a list of people she hoped were guilty and a longer list of people she hoped weren’t. But with Christie you can always be confident that the solution will not be what you expect. There are lots of books that could make a claim to be Christie’s greatest, but for me this one makes the strongest claim of all. A true classic of the genre.
J**R
Certainly one of Christie's best novels
Christie states in the introduction to my copy of Death on the Nile that she considers it the best of Poirot's overseas adventures, and so I started reading prepared to hold her to this claim. I was not disappointed. There are a lot of characters to get your head round, which paints a large and realistic picture of the Nile holiday. This story contains one of the biggest build-ups I think I've read in a crime novel - the first half of the text being background and set-up, but it pays off. My one criticism of this otherwise excellent book is that I worked it out straight away, although I must confess I did miss one detail which formed part of the final explanation. As much as Christie's later narrative tried to throw me off the scent, I found it a little disappointing that I wasn't challenged more. Given that this is the first time this has happened though, it might just be a fluke! Certainly one of Christie's best novels and one I would recommend to anyone wanting a sample of her work (rather than wanting to read the entire canon like me!).
A**R
Entertaining
A classic murder mystery book that I have read before & thoroughly enjoyed . I bought this copy for my friend who is going on a cruise later in the year!
M**G
A whodunnit and escapist travel book, all in one
This is a beautiful setting for a book – it is an escapist read. I found myself Googling locations mentioned in the book such as Abu Simbel (it is stunning). One of the things I like about reading Agatha Christie’s books is that they give you an insight into life in the early 1900s (the book was published in November 1937). For example, a character says she bought a car for £15! It is clearly mechanically unreliable (as you might expect of a car from that era). In another part of the book, a boy is teasing a dog. A character tries to get him to stop. He doesn’t so she “whipped out a penknife and plunged it into him. There was the most awful row”. The former sentence is remarkable and then you read the latter – as if it was indecent for anyone to complain about stabbing a child. The book never mentions a prosecution – it sounds as if a row was the end of it. Agatha Christie’s husband was an archaeologist and she accompanied him to digs in Syria as well as travelling in Egypt for pleasure. It gave her the knowledge and experience to write the book. The author starts the book by introducing the characters, so you realise why they will all end up in Egypt in chapter 2. As in a number of her books, Christie traps her characters (in this case, on a romantic river steamer, the “Karnak”) to limit the number of suspects. As ever, the fun is in trying to work out who the murderer is. Before anyone was murdered, I did even wonder who the victim would be – there is an obvious candidate but until it happens, you can’t be sure. All I will say (as I do not wish to spoil anything) is that the plot is a good one. The beauty of it is that, though you might work out the likely suspect (for once, I did), I couldn’t for the life of me (no pun intended) work out how the murder was carried out - I still desperately needed the “grand reveal”. You do not need to read any other Agatha Christie books before this – it is a “standalone” book (like all of her books save “Curtain: Poirot’s Last Case”). This is a great whodunnit mixed with a travel book. It is helped by the exotic setting of an old river steamer on the Nile, surrounded by the incredible sights of ancient Egypt. It could be an expensive book to buy – it has made me want to go on a Nile cruise. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
J**L
Classic, but brilliant, murder mystery.
This was the second time I had read Death on the Nile and I had also seen film and TV adaptations of it over the years, so the outcome was never going to be a surprise. However, I was impressed again by Agatha Christie's plotting, characterisation, and ability to build tension. It is a great read!
K**R
Brilliant
First ever time reading Agatha Christie Loved this so clever and intricate Will definitely be reading more murder on Orient express next
S**Y
Agatha Christie’s books are legend. This release with their fabulous covers is a must; we’re gradually collecting the set.
J**A
Omg the plot it's so amazing and exciting. And no point you can figure it out that it was going to end the way it does. Agatha Christie is an amazing writer. You'll be delighted by reading this book!
T**Y
S**Y
This was such a great read. I loved reading the mystery. Agatha Christie is one of my favourite authors, and this book is as good as I'd anticipated. Recommended.
N**A
Per gli amanti dei romanzi gialli e per quelli che apprezzano la trama e rimangono incollati fino alla fine per gustarne le emozioni e soprattutto per mettere alla prova le proprie capacità intuitive è sicuramente il film da non perdere ed aggiungo una volta sola poi non basta!!! Troverete tutto condensato in modo che non solo la visione quanto il vostro intelletto ne sarà gratificato. Lo consiglio vivamente cosi come quelli che trattano lo stesso argomento ed interpretato dagli stessi autori.
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