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Search tags: The-Adventure-of-the-Christmas-Pudding
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text 2019-11-28 06:53
Reading progress update: I've read 2 out of 240 pages.
The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding - Agatha Christie

I´ve decided to pick up this collection of five stories, of which I already have read "The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding" last year or the year before. Which isn´t a bad thing at all, because Poirot and his antics about Christmas in an Englisch country manor and (their lack of) radiators is hilarious.

 

Door 20: Dec. 25 – Christmas

Book: Read a Christmas book.

 

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review 2019-10-17 18:29
Great Peek at Poirot During Christmas
The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding: A Hercule Poirot Short Story - Agatha Christie

Well this was short, but sweet. I loved the set-up of Poirot going to an old country house in order to retrieve something for a prince. While there though not only does he get to the bottom of the mystery of a stolen item, but is also able to help sway a young woman to her future. No Hastings, which is a disappointment, but everything else works. This would definitely be a great story for the Festive Tasks that we do every year.

 

"The Adventures of the Christmas Pudding" follows Poirot being asked by a higher up in the British government, to help a foreign prince retrieve a priceless ruby that got stolen from him by a special friend of his. Poirot is implored to go to Kings Lacey and stay with the Laceys during Christmas. Poirot who loathes cold wants to stay in his modern little flat with the heating and plumbing. He finally agrees to go and while there manages to figure out who is behind the stolen ruby and direct a young woman away from a bad romance.

 

So Poirot was actually agreeable to me in this one. Usually he drives me a bit insane, but he is really there to listen to certain characters and give advice. My favorite part of this story was him talking to Mrs. Lacey who is concerned that her granddaughter Sarah has become involved with a man named Desmond Lee-Wortley. Mrs. Lacey and Poirot comment on how much has changed with young girls of the day (this book takes place in the 1960s I assume since it was published in 1960) and how "far" they seem to go with unreliable young men. 

 

Mrs. Lacey is quite smart and reminds me a bit of past Christie characters (an older relative knowing what's what and the best way to get a young woman over an infatuation with an unremarkable man) and definitely knows what what.

I liked Sarah a lot and she seemed to be realizing that maybe things with her beau Desmond are not all they are cracked up to be.

We also have secondary characters like the Lacey's grandson, the aging butler, the cook, and other friends as well. 


So the writing was really good and maybe I laughed at Christie talking about how young women nowadays dress terribly and don't wash or brush their hair. Was this a thing in England at the time? Yikes. I always laugh a bit that Poirot via Christie laments the changes in the young and how things were much better back in the day.


The flow really works and the story moves along nicely. We have Poirot arriving before Christmas day, Christmas, and then the day after.

 

The setting of this country house that is much too large (though modernized here and there) definitely to not be the norm for the time that this book is taking place. Lots of Christie books it seems get into the small fortune that many had to pay to upkeep family homes and how they have to be let and or sold off (see The Body in the Library and The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side to see how the Bantrys eventually sold off their home). 

 

The mystery gets nicely resolved and it's up to the reader to imagine what is next for some of the characters in the story. But based on past Christie books it's pretty obvious what Sarah is going to end up doing next. Or who she will end up with. 

 

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text 2019-10-17 14:25
Reading progress update: I've read 1%.
The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding: A Hercule Poirot Short Story - Agatha Christie

I am going to finish this in the next 30 minutes to just get this off my plate. The cover is so not Christie. It tickles me though.

 

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text 2015-12-27 13:20
2015 Reading Recap, Part 2: The Self-Interview
The Hobbit - J.R.R. Tolkien
The Luminaries - Eleanor Catton
The Small Fortune of Dorothea Q - Sharon Maas
Shire - Sarah Wood,Ali Smith
The Sticklepath Strangler - Michael Jecks
Burmese Days - George Orwell
The Skeleton Road - Val McDermid
Hogfather (Discworld, #20) - Terry Pratchett
The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding - Agatha Christie
A Place of Greater Safety - Hilary Mantel

Olga Godim came up with this creative way of summing up her reading year and challenged everyone to do their own.  Well, while I'm back here ... I'm in!

 

Olga writes: "Creatively, I decided to interview myself about my reading in 2015. The answers could only be book titles I read during the year. In the year 2015, what was your..."

 

Most Memorable Encounter

The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien)

 

An old and treasured acquaintance, who still easily managed to outshine any and every other bookish encounter of the year.  Thanks again to Troy for making me seek him out again!

 

Best Vacation Spot

The Luminaries (Eleanor Catton)

New Zealand!

 

Most Exciting Adventure

Tie: The Secret Life of Winnie Cox and The Small Fortune of Dorothea Q (both by Sharon Maas)

 

Favorite Place

Shire (Ali Smith)

 

Least Favorite Place

Cloud Howe (Lewis Grassic Gibbon)

 

Worst Person You Met

Tie: Joseph Fouché (Stefan Zweig -- biography) and The Sticklepath Strangler (Michael Jecks, Knights Templar series)

 

Most Embarrassing Memory

Fifty Sheds of Grey  (C.T. Grey)

 

Worst Weather of the Year

Tie between the two extremes: Burmese Days (George Orwell) and Grey Granite (Lewis Grassic Gibbon)

 

Scariest Event

The Skeleton Road  (Val McDermid)

 

Funniest Moment

Hogfather (Terry Pratchett, Discworld)

 

Saddest Moment

Tie: Post Mortem  (Kate London) and The Gods of Guilt (Michael Connelly, The Lincoln Lawyer series)

 

Worst Food You Ate

The Five Orange Pips (Arthur Conan Doyle, Sherlock Holmes)

 

Best Food You Ate

The Christmas Pudding (Agatha Christie, Hercule Poirot)

 

... and a few additions of my own:

 

The Understatement of the Year

A Place of Greater Safety (Hilary Mantel)

The French Revolution, from Robespierre's, Danton's and Desmoulins's point of view.

 

Most Precious Acquisition

The Blue Carbuncle (Arthur Conan Doyle, Sherlock Holmes)

 

Favorite Garment

The Chinese Shawl (Patricia Wentworth, Miss Silver series)

 

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text 2015-12-25 11:01
TBR Thursday - The Christmas edition.
Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words - Randall Munroe
The Road to Little Dribbling: More Notes From a Small Island - Bill Bryson
The Invention of Nature: The Adventures of Alexander von Humboldt, the Lost Hero of Science - Andrea Wulf
Why The Dutch Are Different: A Journey Into the Hidden Heart of the Netherlands - Ben Coates
The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend - Katarina Bivald
Clouds of Witness - Dorothy L. Sayers
The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding - Agatha Christie
A Blunt Instrument - Georgette Heyer

To those out there celebrating, I hope you've all had a very merry Christmas!

 

This weeks haul is a 50/50 split of Christmas goodies and my normal lack of impulse control.  My awesome DH bought me Thing Explainer: Complicated Stuff in Simple Words,   The Road to Little Dribbling: More Notes From a Small Island,  The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt's New World,  and Why The Dutch Are Different: A Journey Into the Hidden Heart of the Netherlands.  The last one was his own find (I'd never heard of it) and it's perfect; Amsterdam is my favorite city in the world (so far) and I love visiting the NL whenever I can.  I'm really looking forward to all of these.

 

The last four: The Readers of Broken Wheel Recommend was an online buy that arrived this week, and Clouds of WitnessThe Adventure of the Christmas Pudding, and A Blunt Instrument were finds I made while visiting a new to me used book store in the Melbourne CBD when I was supposed to be Christmas shopping.

 

New books this week: 8

Books read this week: 2 

Physical TBR: 178

 

I hope everyone's having a grand day...

 

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