You need to sign in or sign up before continuing.
Take a photo of a barcode or cover
lesserjoke 's review for:
Endless Night
by Agatha Christie
This is not a mystery novel, although there's a major death fairly late in the text and a subsequent twist that causes the reader to reevaluate what we've heard / understood about the story before that point. It could perhaps be seen as what would happen in a typical Agatha Christie plot were one of her handy detective figures not around to investigate and resolve the matter, which is an interesting change of pace for the writer this deep into her career. It also reminds me of her pseudonymous Mary Westmacott "romances," in that the majority of the tale is just a slow-paced study of two characters and their star-crossed marriage.
Against all that, we have to weigh the fact that this is probably one of the author's most racist books, built upon anti-Romani stereotypes and repeated slurs, including in the very name of the primary setting and its troubled local history. (That some of the supposed curses ultimately prove to be manufactured by outsiders doesn't mitigate the problem or its impact.) And as usual, I personally find Dame Agatha's brand of love-at-first-sight rather hard to accept or seriously invest in, which tends to blunt the effectiveness of the work at large.
It's a difficult title to review in more detail without straying into spoilers, but I will say that I wish we got to spend more time in the final moments of the novel, following those certain revelations, given how they so radically reorient the narrative. This is no Murder of Roger Ackroyd, Christie's masterpiece of four decades earlier wherein a puzzle's ingenious solution invites us to reread particular passages and marvel at the hidden craft of her artful wording choices, yet it contains a similar pivot without enough supporting material on either side. It's promising, but a mixed effort overall.
Like this review?
--Throw me a quick one-time donation here!
https://ko-fi.com/lesserjoke
--Subscribe here to support my writing and weigh in on what I read next!
https://patreon.com/lesserjoke
--Follow along on Goodreads here!
https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/6288479-joe-kessler
--Or click here to browse through all my reviews!
https://lesserjoke.home.blog
Against all that, we have to weigh the fact that this is probably one of the author's most racist books, built upon anti-Romani stereotypes and repeated slurs, including in the very name of the primary setting and its troubled local history. (That some of the supposed curses ultimately prove to be manufactured by outsiders doesn't mitigate the problem or its impact.) And as usual, I personally find Dame Agatha's brand of love-at-first-sight rather hard to accept or seriously invest in, which tends to blunt the effectiveness of the work at large.
It's a difficult title to review in more detail without straying into spoilers, but I will say that I wish we got to spend more time in the final moments of the novel, following those certain revelations, given how they so radically reorient the narrative. This is no Murder of Roger Ackroyd, Christie's masterpiece of four decades earlier wherein a puzzle's ingenious solution invites us to reread particular passages and marvel at the hidden craft of her artful wording choices, yet it contains a similar pivot without enough supporting material on either side. It's promising, but a mixed effort overall.
Like this review?
--Throw me a quick one-time donation here!
https://ko-fi.com/lesserjoke
--Subscribe here to support my writing and weigh in on what I read next!
https://patreon.com/lesserjoke
--Follow along on Goodreads here!
https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/6288479-joe-kessler
--Or click here to browse through all my reviews!
https://lesserjoke.home.blog