

The Seven Dials Mystery (1929 - including some of the same characters, notably Lady Eileen "Bundle" Brent).

With Inspector Japp as a foil in many of the Poirot titles Superintendent Battle outlived his usefulness. This is the last novel in which Superintendent Battle makes an appearance. The murder that takes place at Gull's Point has a clumsy explanation depending on the difference in left and right hand swings and I had great difficulty in imagining the murder weapon. Mr Treves' story of a child who kills another with an bow and arrow is never fully explained which was frustrating.

The plot of the book is quite a clever one, but there were a couple of things that hung: Angus MacWhirter's role for instance: it almost felt as if Christie wanted to include another element of romance. It's Zero Hour.And then Battle goes on to nail the murderer and prevent another murder. The murder itself is the end of the story. A murder is the culmination of a lot of different circumstances, all converging into it from different parts of the globe and unforeseen reasons. The murder begins a long time beforehand. When you read the account of a murder - or say, a fiction story based on murder, you usually begin with the murder itself. And then it gathers pace, with only twenty or so pages to go, and we hear a point made before, by Treves and then by Battle, who makes a statement worthy of Poirot himself:
#Agatha christie towards zero tv#
(The Agatha Christie site reveals that it was adapted for TV in 2007 with Geraldine McEwan as Miss Marple.)īattle's plodding methods and determination to get irrefutable evidence win the day and eventually the right person is apprehended.įor much of the book TOWARDS ZERO feels rather like a romance, with eternal triangles, jealousies, and thwarted desires. In fact I think Agatha Christie fans may well have been disappointed that the author didn't choose one of her other sleuths for the role. Superintendent Battle comes over as a pretty stodgy sort of policeman who does things by the book. The novel progresses, bringing the characters together at Salt Creek, closer and closer to Zero Hour.Īnd then two murders take place and Superintendent Battle staying with his nephew Jim Leach is pulled into the investigation. 'OPEN THE DOOR AND HERE ARE THE PEOPLE' introduces the cast of characters: Angus MacWhirter in hospital after attempting to throw himself off a cliff and failing an unknown person plotting a murder Superintendent Battle called to his daughter's school because she has admitted to pilfering, Nevile Strange, his wife Kay and his ex-wife Audrey Lady Tressilian and Mary Aldin at Gull's Point which all the Stranges will visit for two weeks in September Thomas Royde returning home to Gull's Point from Malaya Mr Treves (whom we met in the Prologue) looking for somewhere to spend his holidays and Ted Latimer, a friend of the Kay Strange. The book is broken up into sections, a feature that the reader barely notices. TOWARDS ZERO opens with a Prologue which introduces the concept of characters converging towards Zero Hour. The last time Superintendent Battle made an appearance was in 1939 in MURDER IS EASY (aka EASY TO KILL). Robert Graves, author of I Claudius, was a neighbour of Agatha Christie’s in Devon during the Second World War and the two became friends. When a houseparty gathers at Gull's Point, the seaside home of an elderly widow, earlier events come to a dramatic head. What is the connection between a failed suicide attempt, a wrongful accusation of theft against a schoolgirl, and the romantic life of a tennis player? To the casual observer, apparently nothing.
