Death
on the Nile
is perhaps the most adapted Poirot novel from Agatha Christie behind Murder
on the Orient Express. Filmed as
sequels to Murder on the Orient Express twice, adapted by Christie into
a play, and adapted into a television drama twice; it is perhaps fascinating to
see why it isn’t as iconic as the former novel.
While it does fit into the subset of Poirot stories with interesting
locale against the usual British murder mystery format, it doesn’t support say
a game changing twist or a particularly interesting comment on aristocracy like
some of Christie’s other work. This is a
novel that has several interesting set pieces, puts the murder on a boat going
down the Nile, and a red herring criminal conspiracy to bring in another of
Christie’s lesser known detectives in Colonel Race who I am most familiar from Cards
on the Table. Perhaps expecting
something as a spiritual follow up to Murder on the Orient Express is
why this read was a bit underwhelming in places. Now, it’s still from an Agatha Christie well
in her prime so the unraveling of the mystery and her cast of characters are
equally as fun as any other book. As
this is set outside of the United Kingdom this does mean that the characters
are more eccentric examples of the British and of course there are secrets for
every character. There are however, too
many characters with several taking a back seat and a long list of potential
suspects who are disregarded once the murder actually happens putting them on
the backseat. Luckily Christie keeps
things interesting by having more than one death occur on the Nile at crucial
moments which helps keeps things interesting and starts weeding down the cast with
one genuinely quite impactful death at around the two-thirds mark.
The
biggest issue for Death on the Nile is actually it’s length. Clocking in at around 330 pages in the
current paperback editions, this is quite long for an Agatha Christie novel and
much of the first third of the book is all setup. While there is some genuine tension building
towards the murder, especially with characters declaring other people they
dislike and perhaps would kill if they had the chance. Be it Simon and Linnet Doyle encountering
Simon’s ex-fiancè Jacqueline de Bellefort, romance novelist Salome Otterbourne,
her oddly protective daughter Rosalie, or the Italian archeologist Richetti,
there is plenty of conflict in this first third of the book that makes it not
impossible to read but feel different.
Christie clearly has personal connections to Egypt, something that does
pop up as a setting in her novels, so there is time dedicated to describing the
tourist sites along the Nile and many of the excursions, taking the point of
view away from Poirot at points. The
leisurely pace feels odd however as the title indicates there is going to be a
death and there are stretches where Christie fails to maintain tension. Once the murder happens, the investigation is
almost exclusively from the perspective of Poirot and Race which is especially
fun to recapture the detectives playing off one another dynamic from Cards
on the Table. It does seem very
quick to wrap up and Christie should be commended for a genuinely shocking
conclusion. Not the reveal of the
murderer, this isn’t entirely a case that’s meant to surprise, but the fate of
the murderer is revealed on the final page in this final moment of the book
leaving the reader somehow shocked. It’s
something that may have scandalized in 1937 when the novel debuted.
Overall,
Death on the Nile is not one of my favorite Poirot novels or my favorite
Christie novels. It’s a book that’s
essentially split into two not equally weighted halves, before the death and
after the death, with the first half having several weak spots. There is still some of that Agatha Christie
magic to be had and once the death happens it turns into some genuinely great
investigating and a great sequence, but that first half is quite the tricky
portion to get through, especially in the modern day when just setting the Egyptian
scene had far more reference points.
7/10.
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