The Monogram Murders

The Monogram Murders is a mystery novel by British writer Sophie Hannah, based on characters created by Agatha Christie. It is the first in her series of Hercule Poirot novels, after being authorised by the estate of Agatha Christie to write new stories for the character. The next two are Closed Casket (2016) and The Mystery of Three Quarters (2018).

The Monogram Murders
Dust-jacket illustration of the first UK edition
AuthorSophie Hannah
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesHercule Poirot
GenreMystery
PublishedSeptember 9, 2014 HarperCollins
Media typePrint (hardback and paperback)
Pages384 pp (first edition, hardcover)
ISBN0-00-754741-2
Followed byClosed Casket 

Plot summary

Poirot is taking a holiday from private-detective work, though in fact he has only travelled to the guest house nearest his London flat; he can even see the flat from the house's parlour window. One evening, while waiting for his dinner in a coffee house he frequents, he is confronted by a distressed young woman who tells him that she is "already dead... or will be soon", but that he absolutely must not pursue her killer. "The crime must never be solved", she pleads.

The next day brings news that three seemingly unconnected people have been murdered in their rooms at the Bloxham Hotel, each with a cuff-link placed carefully in their mouths, and engraved with the initials "PIJ". Furthermore, the staff are alerted to the murders and room numbers by a note left at the front desk, reading "MAY THEY NEVER REST IN PEACE. 121. 238. 317." Poirot, enlisted by investigating Scotland Yard officer Edward Catchpool, whom he meets staying at the same guest house, takes the case, and gradually uncovers a complex web of bigotry, hate, and vengeance.

Characters

  • Hercule Poirot
  • Edward Catchpool

Reviews

Continuity with Christie's original stories

The novel is set in 1929, placing it shortly after The Mystery of the Blue Train, published 1928, and roughly three years before Peril at End House, published 1932. It is therefore set in a relatively early stage of Poirot's long career after he settled in England as a refugee from the Great War, following a distinguished career in his native Belgium.

Poirot's occasional sidekick and chronicler Arthur Hastings is absent from this novel; here, his shoes are filled by thirty-two-year-old Scotland Yard policeman Edward Catchpool, who, like Hastings, serves as the first-person narrator. Hannah has stated that she wanted to avoid reusing any of Christie's supporting cast.[1]

Commissioning by Agatha Christie estate

The Monogram Murders is the first original novel including Hercule Poirot to be commissioned by the Christie estate, more than thirty-eight years after her death in 1976. It is the thirty-fourth novel to feature the character. Agatha Christie wrote her last Poirot novel, Elephants Can Remember, in 1972. The last featuring Poirot and written by Christie was Curtain: Poirot's Last Case, published 1975 but written in the 1940s to be a swansong.

gollark: As if people care about the consistency of their beliefs.
gollark: Instead of generating political opinions using some standard methodology, you just map days of the year to political opinions.
gollark: It's obviously the product of a political opinion calendar.
gollark: But they also specified universal healthcare, basically just killing off people they don't like and capped profits on companies.
gollark: Oh, and their suggestion of "free 15Mbps internet connectivity" is underspecified and stupid. I would just have someone or other design a mandatorily-implemented-in-all-computers-with-communications-hardware self-organizing mesh network protocol.

References

  1. Hannah, Sophie (5 November 2017). "Poirot is a show-off, but he's brilliant. That's why I brought him back to life". The Guardian. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
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