Reading the Detectives discussion

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After the Funeral
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Poirot Buddy Read 31: Spoiler thread for After the Funeral
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Jessica-sim
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May 31, 2020 02:26PM

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She usually outwits me, but I sure enjoy the ride! I’m trying to do better, on these group rereads, and pick up on clues, try and form a theory - but I sometimes wonder, am I just remembering a previous read or watching the Suchet dramatizations, or did I truly figure it out! Either way, I always look forward to my monthly Christie fix. I missed the group rereads of the early Poirot mysteries, I want to reread those as well.

What could Susan possibly have seen in Gregory Banks? Do we ever learn anything attractive about him?

Very good point, that was odd - about them never seeing each other. And I wondered if Susan was one of those motherly types, who wanted a husband she thought needed caring for, but then she seemed almost ferocious about him! So maybe she wanted a weaker partner she could control? I really couldn’t get a handle on those two.


Ooh, well-spotted!
Did anyone else wonder that Maude hadn't completely lost patience with Timothy? Maternal instincts could explain looking after an actual invalid, But Timothy was so clearly a hypochondriac I can't believe a capable woman like Maude could continue to love and be so pushed around like him.

Good one, I totally missed that - misdirection, I guess we could call it?!

I wondered about that, as well! She was clearly a competent, handy, tireless household manager and caregiver, why did she put up with him? That would make a good mystery, as well, when she finally snaps and does Timothy in - I think she’d plan it meticulously.

Misdirection is probably a better way of putting it. But, I think that we could see a lot of misdirection that gives the wrong impression, without being untrue? I'm going to keep this in mind when reading her other novels.

I enjoyed this one a lot and never guessed the murderer. I never think role playing would work in real life but this time is more believable as they hadn't seen each other for 30ish years. I just knew those wax flowers were important as they were mentioned often but never caught on to why.
My favorite scene was Poirot's agent filling him in on the suspects comings and goings, where he addresses all his comments to various items in the room. He gets as close to meeting his eyes as Poirot's shoes. So amusingly written!
My favorite scene was Poirot's agent filling him in on the suspects comings and goings, where he addresses all his comments to various items in the room. He gets as close to meeting his eyes as Poirot's shoes. So amusingly written!

Elizabeth (Alaska) wrote: "I thought the solution to be so totally unrealistic as to be unbelievable. Maybe not everyone would recognize Cora, but at least one or two would do more than a double take."
I think the only people that had seen her beyond infancy were the two sisters-in-law.
The unrealistic part for me was Miss Gilchrest using a hatchet.
I think the only people that had seen her beyond infancy were the two sisters-in-law.
The unrealistic part for me was Miss Gilchrest using a hatchet.


Elizabeth (Alaska) wrote: "How old is older? I thought these were very much middle-aged women. I pictured Cora as no more than very early 40s."
Cora was the youngest sibling and the oldest had just died at 68. I think it was mentioned that no one had seen her since she had married 30 years ago. So I would guess she had to be somewhere in her fifties.
Cora was the youngest sibling and the oldest had just died at 68. I think it was mentioned that no one had seen her since she had married 30 years ago. So I would guess she had to be somewhere in her fifties.

Anyway, as a definitely older woman, I'm having a hard time picturing her as an older that Christie would have felt the need to defend.
You could well be right. My copy is returned to the library so I have no way to check.
Women did seem to be considered old at a much younger age in these GA books.
Women did seem to be considered old at a much younger age in these GA books.

I think you're right about that, and in society in general that long ago. Still, Christie herself was 63 when this was first published. Just her continuing to write and publish was a refutation of the way society should have been looking at women aging.

Cora was the youngest sibling and the oldest had jus..."
She is 49, as mentioned in the text. My reference to 'older' is not meant to say Cora is elderly, just older as in not young as in 'the younger generation' as referred to by 'old' Lanscombe. I think your point about age being seen rather differently in this period is so right. If one considers the descriptions of the women Cora is referred to as cushion like and plump - a far cry from her gawky younger appearance. I always look for the social commentary in a novel as I think it is important. In this novel, as in several others, Christie takes up the idea of the invisibility of companions and servants in relation to Miss Gilchrist. This is said directly by Christie through Miss Gilchrist's comments. I just thought that here was a less direct idea in relation to women past their youth. I am wondering whether she has said that more directly in another novel. And, yes, Sandy, certainly she was a great example of being able to defy conventional attitudes towards older women (as perhaps is her Ariande as a novelist?)

By the way, I think that she would have chosen a hatchet for two reasons. It is, as people here have said, and unlikely weapon for her to have chosen. Wouldn't this be part of her plan to make the murder seem like something totally unassociated with her? Also, the violence would have obliterated some of her features so she was less recognisable as the woman who was impersonated at the funeral.




And now I shall rewade (my word, I think it expresses my feelings about this novel) through Hickory , Dickory , Dock for July's reading.

Christie is quite good at injecting humor into her stories in a way that does not seem inappropriate or out of place. Poirot acting as the UN representative for refugees (while playing down his grasp of English and playing up his foreignness) made me chuckle. Normally we would expect him to bemoan the fact that he wasn't instantly recognized and adored, but here, he uses it to his advantage.

And, yes, the humour in Poirot's role as a representative for refugees. I enjoy the humour, but also the role that it gives Rosamund. She is being built up within the narrative as someone who may reflect some of Cora's characteristics, but is so much smarter perhaps. She is going to control her possibly less than perfect marriage, and perhaps Cora did so as well. So, we have almost parallel characteristics in two different generations, which undermine our assumptions.

And, yes, the humour in Poirot's role as a representative for refugees. I enjoy the hum..."
I also think that both Rosamund and Miss Gilchrist serve as examples of people who you are wise not to underestimate. Poirot even reflects on someone from Lord Edgware Dies, and how more so than "clever" killers, that its the simplistic ones to watch out for.

She would have been all right if her tea shop hadn’t gone bust. But she could have just stolen the painting rather than murdering for it.