Book Review: Black Coffee
Black Coffee |
Adapted from Agatha Christie's play of the same name, Charles Osborne's novelization of Black Coffee is your regular closed-door whodunit, but even with the famous Belgian P. I. around, the story reveals the guilty party too early in the narrative (more a limitation of the play), thus spoiling the surprise denouement normally associated with her works. Poirot is his usual pompous self, and with the help of Hastings' casual remark and Miss Caroline Amory's (Sir Chaud's sister) vital leads, his clever deductions are a result of Christie's competent plotting, which never for a moment gets tedious. Not one of her best mysteries, but she can never go wrong when it features Hercule Poirot, can she?
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