Monday, August 19, 2024

Sparkling Cyanide (1945) by Agatha Christie: A Re-read




🍸 Rosemary Barton has been dead for a year now. Yet, the six people, who gathered around the table at Luxembourg Restaurant to celebrate her birthday when she suddenly collapsed and died, could not forget her still. The coroner's verdict was that she had put the cyanide into her glass by herself, a suicide due to post-flu depression.

🍸 But was it really suicide? Or was it murder, as was hinted in the anonymous letter received by Rosemary's husband George Barton? If so, who, among the six people, was the murderer? Was it the husband himself, out of his rage of Rosemary's love affair? Her little sister Iris, to gain a large inheritance? Or was it Rosemary's male friends, Anthony or Steven - which one was her lover? Maybe it's George's secretary, Ruth, who loved George? Or Sandra, Phillip's wife - did she know of her husband's infidelity? Whoever it was, all six had strong motive to murder Rosemary.

🍸 Agatha Christie had done it again! Sparkling Cyanide (first published in the US in 1945 as Remembered Death) is everything we love in Golden Age detective fiction, especially in Agatha Christie's. Rosemary's character is an important key on this murder case. She was a self-centered, shallow-minded woman who knows how to ensnare men into her net. She reminded me a little of Rebecca de Winter (in Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca). Not the exact personalities, but her power over others that makes her loved and hated at the same time, and how her influence grips the others, that her name evokes some emotions in their selves, long after she died - it felt like she's always present, just like with Rebecca.

🍸 Colonel Race's involvement is pretty small here. He was invited to the second birthday party at Luxembourg - this time for Iris' birthday, but George Barton used it to decoy the murderer by a scenario which he refused to reveal to anyone, which of course would alarm the murderer. Would he succeeded? Or would he be the second murder victim? Quite a proper murder mystery, eh?

Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐1/2

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hosted by Cathy @ 746 Books



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