Now with a beautiful new series look, Agatha Christie's first mystery to feature the beloved investigator Miss Marple--as a dead body in a clergyman's study proves to the indomitable sleuth that no place, holy or otherwise, is a sanctuary from homicide.
Miss Marple encounters a compelling murder mystery in St. Mary Mead, where under the seemingly peaceful exterior of an English country village lurks intrigue, guilt, deception, and death.
Colonel Protheroe, local magistrate and overbearing landowner is the most detested man in the village. Everyone--even in the vicar--wishes he were dead. And very soon he is--shot in the head in the vicar's own study. Faced with a surfeit of suspects, only the inscrutable Miss Marple can unravel the tangled web of clues that will lead to the unmasking of the killer.
Agatha Christie is the most widely published author of all time, outsold only by the Bible and Shakespeare. Her books have sold more than a billion copies in English and another billion in a hundred foreign languages. She died in 1976, after a prolific career spanning six decades.
Lucy Foley studied English literature at Durham University and University College London and worked for several years as a fiction editor in the publishing industry. She is the author of six novels including The Paris Apartment and The Guest List. She lives in London.
Mktg Director @UChicagoPress, editor of The Daily Sherlock Holmes & The Getaway Car: A Donald Westlake Nonfiction Miscellany. Board member @uplcchicago. He/Him.
“You know, old Miss Marple knows a thing or two.” “She is, I believe, rather unpopular on that account.” —Agatha Christie, The Murder at the Vicarage
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4:50 from Paddington: A Miss Marple Mystery (Miss Marple Mysteries Book 8) by Agatha Christie. https://t.co/ffUoFRQ6cN https://t.co/dpCzJfsTPz
?transmission¿ from a forgotten radio tower strangled by weeds, sinking within a silent marsh. Studying horror fiction's capacity for extreme empathy.
Think I'll do one last Agatha Christie. I've enjoyed all of them, but the formula is wearing me out. Decided on the first Miss Marple novel: The Murder at the Vicarage. The killer should be easy to spot as they presumably have a racket for a head. https://t.co/sNdNrgPkKY
"Agatha Christie taught me two things: that plotting mysteries was an art, and that a woman detective could be as strong a character as a male detective." -- Charles Todd, New York Times bestselling author of the Ian Rutledge mysteries and Bess Crawford mysteries
"When she really hits her stride, as she does here, Agatha Christie is hard to surpass." -- Saturday Review of Literature
"The Murder at the Vicarage was my gateway drug into crime fiction at the age of nine and I've never regretted the addiction!" -- Val McDermid, award-winning author of the Tony Hill and Carol Jordan series