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Paperback The Golden Ball and Other Stories Book

ISBN: 0425099229

ISBN13: 9780425099223

The Golden Ball and Other Stories

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Book Overview

A sterling collection of short stories featuring Hercule Poirot and others, The Golden Ball and Other Stories is a riveting compendium of shocking secrets, dastardly crimes, and brilliant detection--a... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Strange Cases

The fifteen stories gathered in "The Golden Ball" by Agatha Christie are far from her typical mystery stories. Rather they are tales about seeking adventure and finding romance, almost every non-mystery story summed up with a happy ending. Yet even with these more mundane stories, Christie managed to craft some unique twists into her traditional plot lines. Some of the standouts of this collection are "The Lamp" which is the story of a woman unafraid to purchase a supposedly haunted house, until her young son speaks of seeing a lonely little boy looking for a playmate. Her fears come to a head when her son becomes ill and it seems as if nothing can be done for him. "The Strange Case of Sir Andrew Carmichael" is a doctor's recollection of a unique case of amnesia of sorts, where a young man has suddenly lost his memory and behaves in the strangest of manners. The doctor is convinced that Andrew's stepmother has something to do with his condition, as well as the ghostly gray cat he keeps hearing at night. "Jane in Search of a Job" is a delightful adventure romp through 1920s England and "Swan Song" lights up a darker side of the grudges that people can carry as an opera singer puts on a show no one will ever forget. There are a few somewhat lackluster stories in the collection, ones that feel more like the Mary Westmacott side of Agatha Christie. Others that deal with strange supernatural beliefs seem a bit dated for our time. However, it is interesting to see the non-mystery side of Christie every once in a while, if only to prove that she was a first rate writer no matter the subject.

Solid Agatha--good for trips; short stories fun

Very good collection of stories. Lots of fun to read in short snippets.

Great for Christie fans

"The Golden Ball and Other Stories" is a wonderful collection of stories by Dame Christie. Full of charm and written with twists reminiscent of O. Henry, this book is great for anyone who loves Christie's work or anyone who loves a well-crafted short story.

excellent

Some of Agatha's most insightful, penetrating writing. The varying tales run the gamut from hilarious, playful, romantic to downright spooky in places. Plus two of them in particular are heart breaking. (I won't reveal which ones.) A really nice addition to her heavy collection, these pieces will stick with you long after you put them down. And yes: one of them even brought me to tears. Here's strong evidence Christie was more than just a one note author. The stories could very well be classified as literary gems.

A mix of fantasy/SF fiction and non-standard adventures

A collection of 15 short stories, none of which feature any of Christie's recurring characters, not even the small fry like Ariadne Oliver. Although the code of ettiquette that she and her fellow writers such as Dorothy L. Sayers followed for mysteries forbade any supernatural elements, Christie could and did occasionally dabble in such stories outside the mystery format. Several of the stories here have such elements; specifically, those from THE HOUND OF DEATH AND OTHER STORIES. Others are more conventional; several of these feature men who 'seize the golden ball of opportunity' and get something out of their adventures, if only some self-respect. They are sorted by the original publication dates in magazines or story collections. "The Hound of Death", "The Gipsy", "The Lamp", "The Strange Case of Sir Andrew Carmichael", and "The Call of Wings" are all taken from an earlier collection, THE HOUND OF DEATH AND OTHER STORIES (see). Properly speaking, by the way, "The Strange Case of Sir Andrew Carmichael" is really "The Strange Case of Sir Arthur Carmichael" - it isn't often that the *title* of a story is the subject of a widespread printer's error. "The Girl in the Train", "Jane in Search of a Job", "The Manhood of Edward Robinson", "The Listerdale Mystery", "The Rajah's Emerald", "Swan Song", "A Fruitful Sunday" - taken from an earlier collection, THE LISTERDALE MYSTERY (see its reviews for details of each). "The Girl on the Train" is essentially similar to "The Golden Ball", although the settings differ. "Jane in Search of a Job" and "The Listerdale Mystery" each involve a woman - one young, one middle-aged - in desperate financial straits answering an advertisement that's too good to be true. "The Manhood of Edward Robinson" and "The Rajah's Emerald" each involve a young man with a girlfriend who's tiresome about money (one is bossy and prudent, the other likes to live higher than her boyfriend can afford) who accidentally gets hold of stolen gemstones and must think quickly to avoid wrongful arrest. "A Fruitful Sunday" starts out on a similar tack, but with a sympathetic girlfriend who *isn't* keen on giving the stones back. "Swan Song", the only story not featuring someone who's struggling, concerns a soprano with a fiendish 'temperament' and her final, definitive performance of _Tosca_. "Magnolia Blossom" (March 1926) Theodora Darrell and Vincent Easton had fallen in love under the branches of the magnolia tree at her home in London, and now, 2 weeks later, she's prepared to run away with him to his home in the Transvaal - until she sees a newspaper account of the collapse of her husband's firm. She can't leave, today of all days. Then Richard Darrell (who hasn't got a clue) asks her to persuade a man into giving her the evidence of his own criminal conduct: Vincent Easton. "The Golden Ball" (1934) Nothing to do with the fairy tale of the same name. George Dundas, like George Rowland (see above) has just been fired by his uncle, for tak
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