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268 pages, Paperback
First published December 19, 1938
¡°But Christmas, you¡¯ll remember, is the season of forgiveness! We¡¯ll welcome the prodigal home.
Ah, but bygones must be bygones. That¡¯s the spirit for Christmas, isn¡¯t it, Lydia?¡±
¡°Everyone lies¡ªin parts like the egg of the English curate. It is profitable to separate the harmless lies from the vital ones.¡±
¡°Poirot said: ¡®That is quite possible. I am always prepared to admit one coincidence.¡±
¡°I believe the present matters --- not the past! The past muust go. If we seek to keep the past alive, we end, I think, by distorting it. We see it in exaggerated terms --- a false perspective.¡±
¡°Marriage is an extraordinary thing¡ªand I doubt if any outsider¡ªeven a child of the marriage¡ªhas the right to judge¡±
¡°It is the quietest and meekest people who are often capable of the most sudden and unexpected violences for the reason that when their control does snap, it goes entirely.¡±
¡°You have said that Christmas is a season of good cheer. That means, does it not, a lot of eating and drinking? It means, in fact, the over eating! And with the overeating there comes the indigestion! And with the indigestion there comes the irritability!
And families now, families who have been separated throughout the year, assemble once more together. Now under these conditions, my friend, you must admit that there will occur a great amount of strain. People who do not feel amiable are putting great pressure on themselves to appear amiable! There is at Christmas time a great deal of hypocrisy, honorable hypocrisy, hypocrisy undertaken pour le bon motif, c¡¯est entendu, but nevertheless hypocrisy!
I am pointing out to you that under these conditions¡ªmental strain, physical malaise¡ªit is highly probable that dislikes that were before merely mild and disagreements that were trivial might suddenly assume a more serious character. The result of pretending to be a more amiable, a more forgiving, a more high©\minded person than one really is, has sooner or later the effect of causing one to behave as a more disagreeable, a more ruthless and an altogether more unpleasant person than is actually the case! If you dam the stream of natural behavior, mon ami, sooner or later the dam bursts and a cataclysm occurs!¡±
Guess Who's Coming For Christmas?
The family's all been invited to Gorston Hall for Christmas and the devilish and domineering "old coot" Simeon Lee has a trick up his sleeve plus two surprise guests to wreak havoc and add to the fun until the big crash and then......the scream from the souls of hell......and then......
"Blood......so much blood......blood everywhere......fresh, wet, gleaming blood"......
Oh, this is a good one. Superintendent Sugden has his work cut out for him, but with the expertise of Hercule Poirot, they make quick work of the interviews to sleuth out the culprit.
Thank you Agatha Christie; adding this one to my favorites! Fast moving with a few good twists along the way!