Is This Really The Final Curtain? - Waiting For Pastiche
74
What Now, Indeed?
An Unexpected End
It is a coincidence that I ran upon this question a day after I finished reading the final installment of a popular long-lived mystery series. The gist of the question here is exactly what I thought; What now? This book is so good and so full of complex yet entertaining mysteries, that I am doubly at odds with the ending. What now, indeed!
Having been immersed to the knees in workforce materials and scientific/mathematical texts for years, I'd had little time until recently for all I had wanted to consume in one of my favorite literature genres, the mystery novel. This is especially the case withthe deductive reasoning approach employed in many stories.
I only began reading Agatha Christie a couple of years ago, and have yet never seen one of the the movies starring M. Hercule Poirot. Since I've reached the end of the line with his cases, I shall have to go out and find the films.
Unlike the generous estate of Sir Dr. Arthur Conan Doyle, which contracts with and allows many other writers to weave tales of Holmes and Watson, there is no parallel in the case of Hercule Poirot. So I am left with, What now? There had been 33 novels and some stories of this detective, but to me, there should have been double that number.What to do? Many new mysteries series in the 21st century are pretty cookie-cutter in nature. It won't do.
I'd only just begun to be intigued and entertained. However, the last case was quite a good puzzle and new readers should appreciate it very much.
News has surfaced that two unpublished Poirot manuscripts were uncovered recently and that they were published in late 2009. Thus, we have two more cases.
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Links to Free Downloads and Information
- Internet Archive: Free Download: Hercule Poirot
Old Time Radio recordings of the detective show. - Hercule Poirot on Facebook
Dealing with the End
Agatha Christie died just 5 months after the death of Hercule Poirot in literature.
The New York Times went so far as to publish a front page obituary for M. Poirot's demise of August, 6, 1975 at the time of the relase of Curtain, his last case. I have never seen this page, but continue to search for it.
Christie had written the manuscript of Curtain some 30 years earlier, during World War II and saved it for the end, wishing it to coincide with her own death. It would be the final curtain - no more Hercule Poirot, no one to write up any more of his cases.
According to an actual timeline, Poirot would have been about 136 years old during his last case. Thsi is similar to The Cat Who mysteries, in which the detective Qwilleran begins as a WWII foreign correspondent in his 40s, but works well into the first decade of the 2000s and is still 50-ish. No pastiche has arisen in that line, either.
I suppose it's similar to favorite TV shows (few) that have ceased broadcasting and left viewers feeling lonely and disappointed. If we had enough good friendships and satisfiying work places, perhaps this would not be so; but, we may lack all those and become attached to television and book characters instead - or Internet game characters. Before us, folks were attached to radio and comic book heroes. We have to find something else to interest us when our favorites are gone. I wonder if anyone dies when their favorite TV show goes off the air?
Curtain
In Curtain, the aging Poirot is afflicted with arthritis and a heart condition, possibly accompanied by other maladies. He sits in a wheelchair. His hair looks different - does he dye his hair? His moustaches - can one dye those as well? Wait, did we see him limping down a hallway or was that another dying man - there are so many in this story?
Read several of the Poirot cases before you read this final affair at Styles. But do read it - and beware of the wheelchair that does not tell the whole truth.
New Storylines are Possible
In Christie's Curtain, I was not expecting the famous detective to die. In some ways, it is a strange story aside from the fact of Poirot's death before the mystery is finally solved. The book is full of references to old age and deja vu and is quite spooky in that vein. Styles is the locale of both Poirot's first (The Mysterious Affair at Styles) and last cases many years apart, and of his death. It is not a happy place, this latter Styles. In fact, it has begun to fall apart and so has Poirot.
The storyline leaves the Belgian detective's old friend, widower Captain John Hastings, with a posthumous letter from Poirot. The detective's letter instructs John to go and find Elizabeth Cole, nee Litchfield, a victim of one of the series of unfortunate disturbances in the book. The really entertaining phrasing in the letter is "Take a train, or a car, or a series of buses..." We don't know if John went, but we hope he did. Curtain's ending leaves open the possibility that Captain Hastings and Elizabeth might meet again - perhaps court, wed, and go on to solve crimes together, perhaps in the tradition of Nick and Nora Charles or Hart to Hart.
John and Elizabeth might join forces with John's scientist daughter Judith Hastings and her new husband, Dr. Franklin, also involved in the murders and plagues of the aging Styles Court. This is enough foundation for several mystery novels set in the last quarter of the 20th Century.
Alas, thus far nothing has occurred along this line, nor has Poirot been resurrected in the fashion of Sherlock Holmes in The Case of the Empty House. Nothing has been contracted with the Christie Estate in the vein of Poirot, and one does not know whether it will ever be considered. It seems pretty well set that Dame Agatha did not want others to make money from her own creation in the future; she said as much I can understand that. But I don't like running out of Poirot.
The First Poirot Case
More of Styles
- Great Mysteries on Screen
Complete episodes of Poirot from the BBC series.
David Suchet, Dame Agatha Christie. and M. Hercule Poirot
CommentsLoading...
Terrific hub and good work. You've gained the expertise in the writing field, I'm so glad you get to let go, relax, and enjoy the Agatha Christie books. They are old favorites for me from years ago.
It is sad that there's a terminus to every favorite series. I'd let the Sherlock Holmes AND the Agatha Christie books go on forever if I had my way!
Any intellectual property goes into public domain after a set number of years. I don't know exactly how many.
I'm not sure, but I thought the issue with Poirot was that he was clearly dead --- unlike Holmes, who just fell from Watson's view, and Watson ASSUMED he had died.
Also, Doyle --- who was either Watson's editor/publisher, or who wrote Holmes by himself --- how will we ever know, right? --- ;-) never actually killed Holmes for sure.
So, he lives on.
Poirot's situation is a little different, as you can see from the book. Of course Agatha did it that way on purpose. Not sure why.
Some authors don't want their books to be published on an e-reader.
But, there are tons of great fictional mysteries and great fictional detectives out there, so you'll never run out of fun mysteries to read.
I loved watching David Suchet's interview. I started reading agatha as a preteen. I've always thought it was too bad that she died two weeks before I was born. I made the mistake of reading Curtain before I finished reading all of Christie's Poirot books and I was upset by some of Poirot's actions in the novel based on his philosophy of crime and crimals. For a time I stopped reading them. Then I found David. I started reading them again. Now there is only one Christie book I haven't read. I want there to always be a Christie mystery I've never read. But I realized with Suchet wanting to film every mstery of Poirot's that it had to be a different detective, or no series detective at all. I simply cannot watch a movie before I read the book.
They are new to North America, but I believe the UK has already seen them.
June 19th-Three Act Tragedy
june 26th-The Clocks
July 3rd-Halloween Party
At least that's the order they are airing them on my station
Hi, Patty ~ So sorry I didn't see your reply until now. I forgot to check the box marked "Follow this Hub's comments" I guess.
I didn't know that about the copyright, but everything has to go into public domain eventually.
In any event, I would not WANT to read a Poirot novel that wasn't written by Dame Agatha. So, for me, there's no issue.
I don't mind reading her novels a second, third, fourth --- even tenth --- time. There's always something new to discover. It's kind of like Shakespeare.
Okay, perhaps not tons --- but I do think you'll find some very good new stuff out there.
Thanks again, for your prompt reply, and sorry for my long delay.
Oh, my.
That is really weird. Tolkien and Orwell are British, and therefore "foreign"? Is that it?
Good one.
I guess Will Shakespeare will be next.
Can you refer me to a link where I can read more about this? Or, just the citations?
I did not know all this, as I say in a previous comment. I thought the issue was that Dr. Watson's editor --- A. C. Doyle :-)) --- no longer owned the copyright.
Since that is not the case --- yes, you are quite correct, that Dr. Watson's :-) heirs have been very generous. But, either way --- I still would not really want to read Poirot by anyone other than Dame Agatha. So, it's not an issue for me.
Thanks for the information, Patty.
Great Hub! I too love the Hercule Poirot novels and am looking forward to finish reading all of the stories so that I can finally read Curtain!


















dusanotes 2 years ago
Good job, Patty. Some of us have really enjoyed over the years reading Agatha Christie's many works of mystery, and Hurcule Poirot is a fantastic character in this genre. You seem to understand it perfectly. Do you also write fiction?
I have written two unpublished novels and am working on one now that concerns freedom-loving people in the South pitted against the liberals of the north who have infiltrated Washington D.C. I guess "infiltrated" is not the word. They were voted in and brought their cronies en masse in the case of Mr. Obama. I'm adept at writing articles, it seems, but the problem is that very few writers can ever cross over and do a top-selling novel unless that person is already in the news such as someone like a Glenn Beck or a William Buckley. Keep up the great work, Patty. Don White