Saturday, 26 September 2015

Ten Little Indians – Agatha Christie



I remember reading this book during the summer between my first and second year of high-school. The girl I fancied back then lent it to me and so I just had to read it – it led nowhere, but at least I have no hard feelings towards her and we’re still good friends.

Agatha Christie’s books fall within the “great read without necessarily being great literature” category: while their literary significance is not particularly striking, it is undeniable that they are delightful to read, and Ten Little Indians is no exception.

For an impressionable fourteen-year old the realization of the meaning of the name U.N. Owen was a coup de théâtre like no others. And the message in a bottle at the end is actually a much deeper reflection of our need for confession – and a legacy – than I realized at first (Ten Little Indians should be used instead of the tree falling – soundlessly? – in a forest for sparking debates about the experience of reality!).

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