Closed Casket (novel)

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Closed Casket
Closed Casket.jpg
AuthorSophie Hannah
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesHercule Poirot
GenreDetective, mystery
Published6 September 2016 HarperCollins
Media typePrint (hardback and paperback)
Pages384 pp (first edition, hardcover)
ISBN0-00-813409-X
Preceded byThe Monogram Murders 
Followed byThe Mystery of Three Quarters 

Closed Casket is a work of detective fiction by British writer Sophie Hannah, featuring Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot.[1] Hannah is the first author to have been authorised by the Christie estate to write new stories for her characters. Hannah's work closely resembles the Golden Age of Detective Fiction in its structure and tropes. Closed Casket even includes a plan of the house in which the murder takes place; such plans were sometimes used in Golden Age novels to aid the reader in their solving of the mystery puzzle.

Plot summary[]

Lady Athelinda Playford, author of a popular series of children's mystery novels, summons her children, lawyers, and Poirot and Edward Catchpool, Scotland Yard detective, to her home in Clonakilty, Ireland, where she plans to announce a change to her will that may shock those closest to her: she intends to leave everything to her secretary, a man with only weeks to live due to a terminal illness, cutting out her son and daughter completely.[2]

Poirot begins to suspect that he and Catchpool have been invited to prevent a murder, but despite their efforts one of the party is killed, and not the one they were expecting. It is revealed gradually that nothing is well within the family. Lady Playford's son is mentally slow and has a wife who is constantly worrying about their future. She has no filter on what she says. Lady Playford's daughter is a mean girl who resents her mother from even before she made changes in the will, probably because her mother gave more importance to her writing than to her daughter. She also has an admirer Doctor Randall Kimpton, who shares the same tongue as his paramour. There's the secretary Scotcher, who is nice to everyone but is that only a facade? There's a nurse Sophie, who loves Joseph. One of Lady Playford's lawyers, Orville Wolfe and the house butler Hatton, who is reluctant to utter a single word provides comic relief in between. In such a setting, Poirot and Catchpool must disentangle the truth from a rat's nest of bitter family resentments, in a family where almost everyone seems to despise each other.

Characters[]

Upstairs (family and guests)[]

  • Hercule Poirot, retired Belgian policeman turned private investigator, invited to the Playford mansion by Lady Athelinda to prevent a murder
  • Edward Catchpool, inspector with Scotland Yard, also invited by Lady Athelinda
  • Lady Athelinda Playford, a sprightly and mischievous woman, author of an Enid Blyton-esque series of children's mysteries about a young sleuth, Shrimp Seddon, and her friends
  • Viscount Harry Playford, Lady Athelinda's son, a thoroughly self-absorbed, insensitive man, preoccupied with his hobby, taxidermy
  • Dorro Playford, Harry's wife, a haughty and self-righteous woman, obsessed with Harry's inheritance from both his mother and his late father
  • Claudia Playford, Lady Athelinda's daughter, a callous and caustic young woman, disrespectful of others and frequently cruel, stemming from childhood resentments
  • Randall Kimpton, Claudia's fiancée, a doctor and Oxford graduate, originally a Shakespearean scholar, extremely arrogant, and devoted to Claudia, as she is to him
  • Joseph Scotcher, Lady Athelinda's secretary, an extremely kind and flattering man, who easily wins people's trust and affection; he is dying of Bright's disease of the kidneys
  • Sophie Bourlet, Joseph's nurse, in love with him, as he loves her
  • Michael Gathercole, Lady Athelinda's lawyer and literary executor, who read and fell in love with the Shrimp Seddon books while growing up in an orphanage
  • Orville Rolfe, Lady Athelinda's lawyer and Gathercole's joint partner in their firm, an extremely fat and gluttonous man

Downstairs (staff)[]

  • Hatton, the butler, an elderly and recalcitrant man, always, it seems, afraid of letting slip some secret
  • Brigid, the cook, a brusque and put-upon woman, always complaining about her fellow staff and the guests
  • Phyllis, the maid, a naive and silly young woman, persecuted by Brigid and enamoured with Joseph

Others[]

  • Inspector Conree, a pompous and bombastic high-ranking Dublin detective
  • Sergeant O'Dwyer, Conree's assistant, lacking confidence due to his boss' frequent tongue-lashings

Reviews[]

Good Housekeeping wrote about the novel: "Closed Casket is deviously plotted, deeply satisfying and does the grande dame of crime proud."

Sunday Times wrote: "Sparkling second outing for Hannah's re-imagined Poirot. The setting (posh Irish country house), the characters (country lawyers, creepy male secretary, stroppy flapper, etc) and the period vocabulary are all spot on, but it's the utter fiendish unpredictability of the plot that makes Sophie the new Agatha."

Continuity with Christie's original stories[]

Returning in this novel is Hannah's own creation, Scotland Yard inspector Edward Catchpool, who serves a similar function to Poirot's original sidekick, Arthur Hastings. The story of Closed Casket takes place mere months after The Monogram Murders, in which Catchpool made his debut. This suggests that, like that novel, this one is sandwiched chronologically between The Mystery of the Blue Train (published 1928) and Peril at End House (1932), the latter of which featured Hastings, who before then had not appeared since the novel immediately preceding Blue Train, The Big Four (1927).

Closed Casket features elements popular among Christie and her contemporaries during the golden age of detective fiction, including a blueprint sketch of the house where the murder takes place, an armchair detective's guide featured in Christie and Poirot's debut, The Mysterious Affair at Styles.

Historicity[]

The novel takes place in the Irish Free State, an independent state founded in 1922 and lasting until 1937. References to the Free State and Irish nationalism are made in the story, such as the destruction by rebels of homes belonging to descendants of the landed gentry.

Commissioning by Agatha Christie estate[]

This is the second novel by Hannah to feature Christie's popular hero, Hercule Poirot, a retired Belgian policeman turned private investigator. Its predecessor is 2014's The Monogram Murders, which was the first novel using one of Christie's original characters to be authorised by her estate in the thirty-eight years since her death (excluding novelisations of Christie's plays by Charles Osborne).

The last Poirot novel Christie wrote, Elephants Can Remember, was published in 1972, while the swansong she wrote for the character during the 1940s, Curtain, was published in 1976.

Miscellaneous[]

A major inspiration for key plot elements and characters seems to have been Dan Mallory, the editor of Sophie Hannah.[3] She was reportedly sceptical of his various claims, hired a private investigator and seems to have integrated many elements from real life into her novel.[citation needed]

References[]

  1. ^ "Closed Casket". www.agathachristie.com. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  2. ^ "Poirot returns: exclusive extract from Closed Casket by Sophie Hannah". The Guardian. 5 May 2016. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
  3. ^ Parker, Ian (4 February 2019). "A Suspense Novelist's Trail of Deceptions". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved 12 February 2019.

External links[]

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