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Marple: Twelve New Stories

 


Description

A brand new collection of short stories featuring the Queen of Crime’s legendary detective Jane Marple, penned by twelve remarkable bestselling and acclaimed authors.

*The first print run will be a true collector’s edition with a gold foiled design on the cover board – pre-order now*

This collection of twelve original short stories, all featuring Jane Marple, will introduce the character to a whole new generation. Each author reimagines Agatha Christie’s Marple through their own unique perspective while staying true to the hallmarks of a traditional mystery.
· Naomi Alderman
· Leigh Bardugo
· Alyssa Cole
· Lucy Foley
· Elly Griffiths
· Natalie Haynes
· Jean Kwok
· Val McDermid
· Karen M. McManus
· Dreda Say Mitchell
· Kate Mosse
· Ruth Ware

Miss Marple was first introduced to readers in a story Christie wrote for The Royal Magazine in 1927 and made her first appearance in a full-length novel in 1930’s The Murder at the Vicarage. It has been 45 years since Agatha Christie’s last Marple novel, Sleeping Murder, was published posthumously in 1976, and this collection of ingenious new stories by twelve Christie devotees will be a timely reminder why Jane Marple remains the most famous fictional female detective of all time.

Review

A brilliant collection of stories.

I am a big Agatha Christie fan and was intrigued if all these authors could pull off (to my taste) Jane Marple. There are a few that really did that for me and I loved them and most of the others were just about there. A couple of them for me missed the mark, but I will let you decide for yourselves which ones you think did or did not pass the test. 

One of the stories stood out above all else for me, with the beautiful descriptions which really took me away with them. Another stood out for the language which felt so close to that of Jane Marple. There was one story where a phrase felt off for it to be said by Miss Marple, and it did slightly annoy me. The stories however are allowed to cover the period from the 1930s to the 1970s so there is a difference in language depending on when each story is set.

The commonalty all the stories have is that they are wonderful mysteries. Even if you don't like or have never read Miss Marple stories, give these a go, as you will be missing out if you like a mystery. 

I'm not the biggest fan of short stories, but these had me enthralled and I will be reading them again.

I'm giving this collection of stories 4 out of 5 stars. My thanks to netgalley for the ARC to review.

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