Funerals Are Fatal
After the Funeral (originally Funerals Are Fatal)
By Agatha Christie
Published 1953
213 pages
Synopsis
Richard Abernethie is dead, but there is nothing unusual is
finding an ill man dead in his bed. That’s what everyone thinks, until an
offhand comment by his estranged sister, Cora, at the funeral that implies a
more sinister cause of death: murder.
Abernethie’s old friend and lawyer, Mr. Entwhistle, is stuck on
her statement though and begins a line of inquiry, in order to dismiss her implication
as nothing more than a joke, or so he makes himself believe. But before he can
speak with her, she turns up dead in her home, only the day after the funeral, maimed
by a hatchet. Her death seems too convenient to be a coincidence and Mr.
Entwhistle enlists the help of another old friend, Hercule Poirot, to investigate
Abernethie’s remaining family, each with their own motive and opportunity to
commit either murder. When Cora’s companion and cook turns up at the local hospital
with arsenic poisoning, the local inspector turns to Poirot with the new
evidence and a hope to put this case to rest.
The suspects come together, through Poirot’s design, at Abernethie’s family home, so the detective can observe them in person, unravel the web of family secrets, and solve these heinous crimes. Complete with false confessions, numerous red herrings, and a murderer you won’t see coming!
Key Genre Elements-Mystery
- ·
Readers understand “whodunnit” and why by the
end of the book
- · The story focuses on the investigator/investigative
team
- · Pacing always moves toward the reestablishment of equilibrium (justice)
Read-Alikes
The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin- The mysterious death of an
eccentric millionaire brings together an unlikely assortment of heirs who must
uncover the circumstances of his death before they can claim their inheritance.
A Comedy of Heirs by Rett MacPherson- Genealogist Tori O'Shea gets
more than she had bargained for when she researches her own family tree,
unearthing information about the murder of her great-grandfather, a crime in
which her great-uncle was the prime suspect, and discovers that long-buried secrets
can have deadly implications for the present.
Still Life by Louise Penny- Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of Canada's Surete du Quebec is called to
Three Pines, a tiny hamlet south of Montreal, just north of the U.S. border, to
investigate the suspicious hunting "accident" that claimed the life
of Jane Neal, a local fixture in the village.
The Death of Mrs. Westaway by Ruth
Ware- On a day that begins like any other, Hal receives a mysterious and
unexpected letter bequeathing her a substantial inheritance. She realizes
quickly that the letter was sent to the wrong person--but she also knows
that she can use her cold-reading skills to potentially claim the money.
Hal attends the funeral of the deceased and meets the family...
but it dawns on her that there is something very, very wrong about this strange
situation and the inheritance at the center of it.
In middle school I was obsessed with mysteries, but I don’t tend to read them anymore. I loved The Westing Game so much when I was younger. Seeing that title makes me remember why I loved mysteries. You mentioning it as read-alike makes me interested in reading it.
ReplyDeleteI loved The Westing Game so much, and I definitely credit it for my love of mysteries! Christie's books tend to be shorter and more accessible I think than some of the mysteries today. I love Tana French but I could do with about 100 less pages describing the Ireland scenery. Plus I think Christie does such a great job of dropping subtle hints, just enough that the ending is plausible, but not enough, usually, to give away the culprit!
DeleteJennifer,
ReplyDeleteI love all of the read-alikes you listed! I recently read And Then There Were None by Christie and enjoyed it so much. At one point I was looking for something similar to her style and ended up striking out, but I think I will have to give Louise Penny a try!
And Then There Were None is so good! I picked up a box of Agatha Christie novels at a garage sale about 5 years ago, 25 mystery books for $5 seemed too good to pass up. I've been making my way through them and thought this was a great time to break one out, with her having such a classic mystery style. The Clocks is another great one of hers, and Cat Among the Pigeons. And Louise Penny is a great choice! I love her books, and Chief Inspector Armand Gamache.
DeleteHi Jennifer,
ReplyDeleteWhile I'm not a big mystery reader, I definitely have read a few good books from this genre. I remember staying up waaaaay too late into the night to finish And Then There Were None when I was probably in 5th or 6th grade. It may have been a little over my reading level, but my dad was an economist, not a librarian.
For a long time, I thought that ATTWN was representative of Christie's work, and it wasn't until I started working in libraries that I realized that Christie mostly wrote cozy mysteries, like Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot.
It really is true that the mystery genre is an intellectual genre: I do enjoy trying to figure out the "whodunit" from clues revealed in the work.
Thanks for sharing your post!
-Daniel Thurston
Hi Jennifer,
ReplyDeleteI had never read Agatha Christie before reading And Then There Were None for my mystery annotation for this class (which seems to be a favorite Christie title!). I definitely enjoyed the read and look forward to reading more of her works. You've sparked my interest in the Hercule Poirot series with your synopsis of After the Funeral. I love a good mystery with family secrets! We have the Poirot television series on DVD at our library which seems to circulate pretty well. I may check that out as well.
Hi Jennifer,
ReplyDeleteI read an Agatha Christie book for my mystery annotation, too. Her work has such a strong influence on the genre, even though it's been nearly seven decades since this book was published! Her books are still best-sellers and are frequently being adapted into films. Her success as a mystery writer is truly incredible!
Great annotation - full points!
ReplyDelete