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| Christie, Agatha: The Man in the Brown Suit
Christie, Agatha: The Man in the Brown Suit
B O O K R E P O R T
B y F l o r i a n K a t z i n g e r
AGATHA
CHRISTIE
The Man in the Brown
Suit
Perg, 3rd of April
1997
Originaldokument enthält an dieser Stelle eine Grafik! Original document contains a graphic at this position!
A g a t h a
C h r i s t i e
is known throughout the world as Queen of
Crime. Her books have sold over a billion copies in the English language with
another billion in 44 foreign languages. She is the most widely published author
of all time and in any language, outsold by only the Bible and Shakespeare. She
is the author of 79 crime novels and short story collections, 19 plays and 6
novels written under the name of Mary Westmacott.
Agatha Christie was born in Torquay. Her
first novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, was written toward the end
of the First World War, in which she served as a VAD. In it she created Hercule
Poirot, the little Belgian detective who was destined to become the most popular
detective in crime fiction since Sherlock Holmes. It was eventually published by
The Bodley Head in 1920.
In 1926, after averaging a book a year,
Agatha Christie wrote her masterpiece. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd was
the first of her books to be published by Collins and marked the beginning of an
author-publisher relationship which lasted for fifty years and well over seventy
books. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd was also the first of Agatha
Christie’s books to be dramatised – under the name Alibi
– and to have successful run in the West End. The mousetrap, her
most famous play of all, is the longest-running play in history.
Agatha Christie was made a Dame in 1971. Her
last two books to be published were Curtain: Poirot´s Last Case in
1975, and Sleeping Murder, featuring the deceptively mild Miss Marple, in
1976. Both were best-sellers. Agatha Christie also wrote four non-fiction works
including an autobiography and the delightful Come, Tell Me How You Life,
which celebrates the many expeditions she shared with her archaeologist husband
Sir Max Mallowan.
M a i n
C h a r a c t e r s
Anne Beddingfield (A beautiful, young
adventurer. She is the main Narrator. Always searching for new novels, by
investigating the Man in the Brown Suit)
Sir Eustace Pedler (Member of the Houses of Common, responsible for
South-African affairs. A genteel older gentleman. But also doubtless the most
smartest character of this novel. In fact he is ”The Colonel”. Some
parts of the book are out of his diary.)
Nadina (A famous Russian dancer, who has taken Paris by storm. She is married
with Carton. She fools everybody until she was killed by ”The
Colonel” at the Mill-House, owned by Sir Eustace Pedler)
”The Colonel” (His
profession is jewel-robbery and he is a great brain. ”If you want a thing
done safely, do not do it yourself!” The most mysterious figure in this
novel.)
Colonel Race (A Secret Service agent.
He wants to convict ”The Colonel”. Anne is afraid of him and loves
him at the same time. His aim is to conquer Anne’s heart)
Suzanne Blair (A good friend of Anne.
They have become acquainted with at the Kilmorden Castle. Suzanne helps
Anne unselfish, even she is longing for her husband Clarence.)
Guy Pagett (Sir Eustace Pedler’s
secretary. He has a ”guilty secret”: He is married to a woman and
has four children, although he is Pedler’s secretary. He is employed by
him for six years and did nothing wrong.)
P l o t
S y n o p s i s
The whole story is about pretty, young Anne
Beddingfield, who came to London for adventure. She found it immediately on the
platform of Hyde Park Corner tube station, where a thin man, reeking of
mothballs, lost his balance and was electrocuted on the rails. Anne was
eyewitness and felt that somebody was behind her before the man fell. As she
turned round a man in a brown suit came and declared as a doctor, examined the
body, resulted that the man is dead and disappeared as fast as he came. Young
Anne needed some air and followed the him. Suddenly he throw a piece of paper
with the inscription 17.1 22 Kilmorden Castle away. It smelt horribly of
mothballs.
Although Scotland Yard’s verdict was
accidental death. Anne decided to investigate the case and her first clue was
the headline of the Daily Budget:
EXTRAORDINARY SEQUEK TO TUBE
ACCIDENT
WOMAN FOUND STRANGLED IN LONELY
HOUSE
At the Mill House in Marlow, which is
property of Sir Eustace Pedler, the body of a beautiful young woman was found.
The house is to be let unfurnished and Mr. Pedler is wintering on the Rivera. An
order to view the property of Mr. Pedler was found in a pocket of the man who
was found in the tube station.
Now Anne got assured that there was more than
a accidental death and she finds out some hints point by point. She found a roll
of films at the Mill House, but they still had been developed. The Kilmorden
Castle was a ship to South Africa, from where the victim was. She bought a
ticket and went on board.
There she experienced some adventures but to
describe them all would go beyond the scope of a book report. On the ship
different characters appear. Anne gets acquainted with Suzanne Blair, a woman,
who helps Anne unselfish in her investigations. Anne also finds out that Sir
Eustace Pedler and his secretary Guy Pagett join the Kilmorden. There is also a
second secretary with Pedler, Mr. Harry Rayburn and another human being Anne
meets, Rev. Edward Chichester. Colonel Race, an alleged Secret Service Agent,
tells a story about a diamonds robbery. Anne asked to get cabin 17, because of
the clue on the scarp of paper and one night somebody wants to get in. Now Anne
and Suzanne think about and finally find diamonds in one of the film-rolls. Anne
took them with her just by chance. Anne gave them to Suzanne, she should care
about them. On the last night of the journey Anne is nearly thrown overboard by
an strong man, but Mr. Rayburn saves her life. On the next morning he tells her
a secret. He is the Man in the Brown Suit and that she should better stop
investigating in this case. Her life might be in great danger.
After arriving in South Africa Anne walks
into her enemies trap. She visits the supposed house of an old friend of her
father. Fortunately she can escape and hears a conversation of Edward Chichester
and another man. Now the story gets so tangled that I only want to sum it up.
Anne, Suzanne, Colonel Race and Mrs. Pettigrew, a new secretary of Mr. Pedler,
travel with Mr. Pedler in his private wagon to Rhodesia. There Anne got a
message that Mr. Rayburn will wait for her in the night and our young heroine of
course follows this hint. The only thing she remembers that she was hit and
awakes in Mr. Rayburns house on a small island. Rayburn has saved her
life.
There she is told the truth by Harry Rayburn.
He travelled to London because he has been told that Carton, who works at De
Beers’, a diamonds-agency, is going to sell diamonds, which he and a
friend of him have been suspected to have stolen from his friend’s father.
(That is the story Colonel Race told at the Kilmorden) . When Carton saw Rayburn
at the tube-station, he was so frightened that he had lost balance and felt on
the rails. (Carton has seen Rayburn’s face in the newspapers.) Rayburn
said that he is a doctor and checked Carter. He found some film-rolls and a
paper with 1.17.Kilmorden. He lost the paper somewhere and also the film-rolls.
(Anne found it both during her investigation) But there was still another
figure. Anita Grünberg, or Nadia. She was married to Carton and was also
involved in the robbery. She had been killed at the Mill-House. But Rayburn says
that he has nothing to do with that.
In the end of the book Anita discovers that
”The Colonel” Sir Eustace Pedler and he killed Nadia at his house in
Marlow. He sent Pagett on holiday and so he could easy travel from the Rivera to
London and kill Nadia in his own house.
Finally Anne and Harry Rayburn, who is in
fact John Harold Eardsley, the son of a diamond-mine owner, marry and have a son
together.
P e r s o n a l
C o m m e n t
This is a typical Agatha Christie
–book.
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