Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Mrs. Christie at the Mystery Guild Library

MRS. CHRISTIE AT THE MYSTERY GUILD LIBRARY by Amanda Chapman is my new favorite book of the year. It is a very cleverly written mystery and features an appearance by Agatha Christie as she returns from “eternity” to solve a murder in current day New York City. Her fellow sleuths include Tory Van Dyne, a young book conservator who is coming to terms with her own past trauma. Tory’s voice (and the self-reflections to which readers are privy) is fun, observant, and somewhat self-deprecating. She is a very appealing character as is her ditzy actress cousin, Nicola (“exactly what you would imagine a grown-up Eloise would be like”). There is also her steadfast co-worker (Adrian Gooding), an 11-year-old neighbor from Ireland (Mairead – like parade), and Detective Sebastian Mendez-Cruz, all of whom contribute to solving the intricate, puzzling mystery with its multiple suspects and unexpected twists. Sebastian (a “man with the eyes of a sad saint”) provides a slowly building romantic interest which adds to the humor, but the best part of this novel is the way in which Chapman skillfully incorporates quotes from numerous works by Christie. Several are included as chapter introductions, but the author often had me smiling at the many others which are inserted almost seamlessly in the witty dialogue. MRS. CHRISTIE AT THE MYSTERY GUILD LIBRARY received a starred review from Library Journal (“a real treat for any Christie fan”) and Publishers Weekly (“Uncovering a killer, it turns out, can be just as fun in the Big Apple as it is in St. Mary Mead.”). Highly recommended. 

In her Author’s Note, Amanda Chapman recommends reading Lucy Worsley’s biography and John Curran’s Agatha Christie’s Secret Notebooks, saying of Agatha Christie, “I imagined I could almost hear her voice in my head as I began to write -- a bit reserved but warm, quietly confident and often very, very funny.”

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