
Postern of Fate
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Narrated by:
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Hugh Fraser
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By:
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Agatha Christie
About this listen
The final Tommy & Tuppence novel.
Tommy and Tuppence Beresford have just become the proud owners of an old house in an English village. Along with the property, they have inherited some worthless bric-a-brac, including a collection of antique books. While rustling through a copy of The Black Arrow, Tuppence comes upon a series of apparently random underlinings.
However, when she writes down the letters, they spell out a very disturbing message:
M a r y – J o r d a n – d i d – n o t – d i e – n a t u r a l l y…
Critic reviews
"Past and present interlock impressively...this is a genuine tour de force." (Observer)
"The Beresfords are wonderfully revived. Smooth, beautifully paced, and effortlessly convincing." (New York Times)
The Manchester Terrier, Hannibal, is a great personality. (I have a friend who has a feisty little canine of this rare breed, developed as ratters, like a Dobermann in concentrated form, so I appreciate that he is more life-like than many of the humans!)
It’s not a book to recommend to anyone who doesn’t already like the Beresfords, but I liked to know what had happened to their children (especially Betty, whom they adopted).
Tommy and Tuppence are the only Christie principals who lived in “real time”: very young in The Secret Adversary, young marrieds in Partners in Crime, 40-somethings in N or M? Etc. And they have a proper family life, unlike Poirot (whom I like) or Miss Marple (who gets up my nose, so I don’t buy those audiobooks- too much exposure on old TV), who are always old, little changed in 40-50 years of senior citizenship!
It isn’t a very good book, but it rounds off the T&T saga, and Hugh Fraser performs it well, although he does make (repeatedly) one of his rare errors of pronunciation - Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Catriona” is properly pronounced more like “Katrina” with the stress on the first syllable and a very short “o” sound. I have two nieces of that name which is the anglicised (simplified) spelling of the Scots & Irish Gaelic version of Catherine.
He also messes up with “Achille” (The Big Four), but that’s only two aberrations (of his, he’s not responsible for authorial gaffes) in many, many hours of portraying characters of all ages, diverse nationalities and social situations, of both genders.
Christie’s swan song
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Slow burn
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Excellent read
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Not Poirot or Marple.
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The conversations between ‘Tuppence’ and ‘Tommy’ are often so stilted that even the brilliant Hugh Fraser seems to struggle a bit. But it’s all very lighthearted, there’s another excellent Christie dog beautifully observed and some surprising, currently relevant, anti-Fascist politics.
Fun dog, and totally safe escapism
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A must read for all mystery fans
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Spies and Assassins
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Be careful . . .
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A good story well read
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So pleasant to listen to - Hugh Fraser!
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