I vote with Megan. And I hate the cheaterliness. But when she sticks to the detective's POV, I like her storytelling better.
'War Stories'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I keep being shocked by the racism and classism in them. I can't tell if Agatha Christie is brilliantly skewering the attitudes of the British at the time, or is so steeped in that culture that she doesn't even notice.
Same thing happened to me with my vintage Nancy Drews. It shocked me so badly I packed them away. I was going to sell them, but inertia borne of not wanting to pass along books containing such attitudes (and okay, pure laziness) has so far prevented me.
I don't think Agatha Christie mysteries are as bad as early Nancy Drews (although I suppose it depends what year series you have as they went through many incarnations for precisely that reason).
I don't think Agatha Christie mysteries are as bad as early Nancy Drews (although I suppose it depends what year series you have as they went through many incarnations for precisely that reason).
On the other hand, I think Nancy Drew at least avoided using the n-word in one of the titles. That one is probably my favorite Christie book (not that I've read a lot of them), and pretty atypical for her from what I gather.
I'm trying to think of other mass-market (as opposed to "literature")books I've read that were written in the 1930s to compare on the race issue, and the only ones I can think of are the Little House books, in which Wilder only encounters African-Americans once (the doctor in The Little House on the Prairie), and views Indians in a much more sympathetic light than her mother saw them. Her opinions on Indians were obviously shaped by the fact that she was on the verge of the frontier most of her life, and sensed the passing of what had gone before as it was changing throughout her childhood.
I've read mysteries from the '20s and '30s - Dorothy Sayers, John Dickson Carr, among others - and I do remember reading some things that made me cringe. And John Buchan ("The Thirty-Nine Steps") ... eesh.
On the other hand, I think Nancy Drew at least avoided using the n-word in one of the titles.
Yeah, but then there was The Mystery of the Missing Mick, which didn't go over too well with the Irish population.
I remember some cheesy dialect in some of the ones I got.
The early Nancy Drew (and The Bobbsey Twins) were bad enough that some of it made me cringe as a child. Especially when my mom read The Bobbsey Twins out loud, and Sam and Dinah (the black servants) sounded like "I's gwine a go down t' tha stoah and buys me some a dem der watermelons." It was really bad. I am not sure if those were changed in later incarnations.
The Agatha Christie stuff is more along the lines of -- "he may be an ass, but he certainly didn't want a Russian Jew calling him one!"
Yeah, but then there was The Mystery of the Missing Mick, which didn't go over too well with the Irish population.
Heh. Nope, I'll bet it didn't.