Detective Fiction

Peril at End House by Agatha Christie

Agatha Christie's 1932 classic Peril at End House is full of sheer delicious devilry and suspense that will have you feverishly devouring every page. It delivers all the deliciously ominous twists and chills behind a potential cliff-side massacre that you'd expect from the genius Queen of Crime herself.

Black Coffee by Agatha Christie

What ultimately makes "Black Coffee" such a delectable literary treat is how seamlessly it blends all the most delicious ingredients of an Agatha Christie whodunit - labyrinthine clues, devious misdirects, memorable character turns, and of course, the dazzling final revelation that resolves the entire production's preceding ambiguities in one fell swoop of brilliance.

The Mystery of the Blue Train by Agatha Christie

When fabulously wealthy American heiress Ruth Kettering trades in her unhappy marriage to embark on an ill-fated elopement with her longtime lover aboard the...

The Big Four by Agatha Christie

When a desperate, mud-splattered stranger bursts into Hercule Poirot's London apartment raving about an omnipotent crime syndicate called "The Big Four," the brilliant Belgian...

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie

"The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" stands as one of the most significant and cunningly devious mystery novels ever published. Not so much a straightforward whodunit as a sly magic trick that gleefully exposes the trickster's sleight-of-hand even while we're still falling for their disinformation.

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