Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

The Secret Adversary
The Secret Adversary
The Secret Adversary
Ebook318 pages5 hours

The Secret Adversary

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Agatha Christie’s second novel, “The Secret Adversary”, which was first published in 1922, introduces the world to the adventures of intrepid detectives Tommy and Tuppence, or as they are more formally known, Thomas Beresford and Prudence Cowley. The two young friends find themselves out of work after the end of the first world war and form the partnership “The Young Adventures, Ltd.” They are immediately hired by a mysterious individual by the name of Mr. Whittington to find a young lady named Jane Finn. Jane has not been seen in the five years since she was on board the Lusitania when it sank. She is believed to be alive and in possession of a treaty, the contents of which the government prefer remain hidden. Tommy and Tuppence, hot on Jane’s trail, are quickly drawn into a dangerous world of government secrets, violent kidnappers, hidden identities, and murderous plots. Christie is a master at creating suspension and intrigue, as well as believable characters and engaging dialogue, and these gifts are evident throughout this clever and entertaining novel. This edition includes a biographical afterword.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 11, 2019
ISBN9781420964141
Author

Agatha Christie

Agatha Christie is the most widely published author of all time, outsold only by the Bible and Shakespeare. Her books have sold more than a billion copies in English and another billion in a hundred foreign languages. She died in 1976, after a prolific career spanning six decades.

Read more from Agatha Christie

Related to The Secret Adversary

Related ebooks

Classics For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for The Secret Adversary

Rating: 3.5384615384615383 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

65 ratings53 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Secret Adversary (1922) (Tommy & Tuppence #1) by Agatha Christie. The first and the best of the Tommy & Tuppence stories, this book features a truly secret adversary in the form of Mr. Brown. Throughout the tale our young, intrepid heroes must overcome a heinous cadre of evil doers in order to protect England, and the common worker, from the horrors of Labour unrest and red communism. And there is a nifty opening act set aboard the doomed Lusitania.There are Bolshevists and American Millionaires (as we know all Americans are) toting guns and threatening to use them. Spies seem to lurk in every shadow and a top secret document is at the center of all the intrigue.Tommy andTuppence themselves are a reflection of the young adult of the time, but a bit more footloose than normal. Back from the Great War they are bored and restless and looking for adventure.Man do they find it.A nice bit of escapist mystery telling with a bang-up ending that will have you wondering til the final pages. If you haven’t read this part of Christie’s oeuvre it is time to do so.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I’ve long held an animus against Agatha Christie’s Tommy and Tuppence novels. Although I’m equally fond of Poirot and Miss Marple, and although I have enjoyed several of Christie’s stand-alone novels that lean more toward the spy or thriller genres than toward conventional murder mystery, I had never been able to finish a T &T book. The combination of a holiday with several long plane journeys and a free copy of The Secret Adversary coming out from copyright and on to Project Gutenberg motivated me to address this deficiency once and for all.And so I did. That is, I did manage to plow through Adversary, right to the very end. But did so doing change my mind about this series? No, I’m afraid there I must report failure.This story of wartime espionage carried out by plucky and amusing amateurs has its moments, but there’s something that’s just off kilter in its combination of portentous plot with lighthearted badinage and flirtation. Tommy and Tuppence’s mission to thwart geopolitical catastrophe feels too often like Hello Kitty and Garfield being thrown into the Labyrinth to take on the Minotaur.We should all be very glad indeed Christie didn’t waste too much time working this vein. Not recommended.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    My first Agatha Christie book, and what a proper introduction it was!Thoroughly enjoyed this book. A definite page turner with characters to easily love.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Synopsis: 'In the Prologue, a man quietly gives important papers to a young American woman, as she is more likely to survive the sinking RMS Lusitania in May 1915.In 1919 London, demobilised soldier Tommy Beresford meets war volunteer Prudence "Tuppence" Cowley. They are both out of work and money. They form "The Young Adventurers, Ltd". Mr Whittington follows Tuppence to offer her work. She uses the alias "Jane Finn", which shocks Whittington. He gives her £50 and then disappears. Curious, they advertise for information regarding Jane Finn.The advertisement yields two replies. The first is from Mr Carter, whom Tommy recognises as a British intelligence leader from his war service; he tells them of Jane Finn aboard the Lusitania when it sank. She received a secret treaty to deliver to the American embassy in London. She survived but no trace has since been found of her or the treaty, the publication of which now would compromise the British government. They agree to work for him, despite his warnings of the dangerous Mr Brown. The second reply is from Julius Hersheimmer, an American multimillionaire and first cousin of Jane Finn, staying at the Ritz Hotel. Intent on finding her, he has already contacted Scotland Yard; Inspector Brown took his only photo of Jane, before a real inspector contacted him. They join forces with Julius, too.'Review: This is the first of the Tommy and Tuppence mysteries and it's a good one.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The intrepid young Tommy and his childhood friend known as Tuppence embark on a dangerous journey to find a missing young woman, and trace some important documents. They become involved in a mostly political gang, headed by the unknown and ruthless 'Mr Brown'.... This was Agatha Christie's second published novel, and a thriller more than a mystery. I guessed Mr Brown's identity before I was half-way through, though at first I assumed it was a standard Christie red herring. This made the story all the more tense, although - having finished - I realise it's all somewhat unrealistic. Much of the political discussion went rather over my head, too. However, the main characters are fairly well-rounded, some of the conversation amusing, and the whole an exciting story which I could hardly put down in the final chapters. Recommended if you like light crime fiction from the 1920s.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Considering she is THE bestselling author (only surpassed in copies sold by William Shakespeare and the Bible), it shouldn't be surprising that I have only scratched the surface in reading the work of Agatha Christie. And yet, I found myself a little surprised to stumble upon the adventures of Tommy and Tuppence in her second novel, The Secret Adversary. The pair of adventurers were featured in four novels and a bunch of short stories but they are overshadowed by Christie's mainstays Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. Perhaps it was because they felt so different from Christie's other works, but I found myself really drawn into the story and had a lot of fun with this novel.The Secret Adversary is set (mostly) in London shortly after the conclusion of World War One. It begins with a conversation between two friends, Tommy and Prudence (who goes by Tuppence) as they bemoan their lack of fortunes and try to come up with ways to secure themselves financially. On a whim, they decide to take out an advertisement in the paper and hire themselves out as Young Adventurers "willing to do anything, go anywhere." Before the ad has even run, Tuppence is surprised to find herself approached by a strange man who overheard the pair and wants to hire them but who then inexplicably gets angry and fleas when she gives him a false name, Jane Finn. The next day they take out another advertisement regarding Jane Finn and they are quickly flung into a mystery adventure that threatens to topple the British government.The main conflict in the book revolves around post-war political machinations. Specifically, a group of 'Bolshevists' are working a plot to overthrow the current government and seize power. This multinational plot hinges on the existence of an unknown treaty kept safe by a missing young woman named Jane Finn. Tommy and Tuppence are hired to find Jane Finn and recover the treaty before the enemy can use the treaty to expose and topple the government. Not being a strong history buff, I had a hard time deciding just exactly what this treaty could contain that would do all it claimed possible but I set that aside and just let the MacGuffin serve its purpose in giving our heroes and villains something to search for.The plot maneuvered itself around England, thrusting our young adventurers into one problem after another. The threads of the story grew more and more intricate as new locations and characters made their appearance. Christie did an excellent job dropping clues and foreshadowing to help the reader root for the heroes and try to predict the mysterious mastermind behind the struggle. I found myself changing my guesses a couple of times before the solution finally became clear. Even at the very end, the author threw in a couple of twists and turns late in the story to try and lead the reader down one path or another. Sometimes I find misdirection like this annoying. In this book, I felt like they were very well done and felt like a natural progression of events rather than like the author was trying to hide something from us (even though she was, which is the case with any mystery).I had a lot of fun with the main adventure plot but I felt like the real draw of the story was the characters, particularly the interactions between Tommy and Tuppence. At first, they felt a little stereotypical to me (and some aspects of that remains if looked at from a high level) but I enjoyed the way they were fleshed out throughout the story. Their behaviors and motivations were great and felt really well defined. This lead to a great progression of plot where the course of action felt like the logical and natural course for the characters to follow. I especially loved the dialog. The quick witted banter of Tuppence was delightful and the back-and-forth, particularly between she and Tommy, was great fun.On the whole, I really enjoyed this book. The characters felt fresh and fun. The writing was solid and flowed well. The pacing was good at keeping the action going while still slowing down enough for logical exposition and moments of insight to let the reader delve into the mystery themselves. The plot was laid out logically with just enough information withheld to keep the solution at bay while also revealing enough to let the reader feel wise and informed. Reading this makes me want to seek out more adventures of Tommy and Tuppence. Fortunately, there are more to be found.****4 out of 5 stars
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Jane Finn, a young woman surviving the sinking of the Lusitania, disappears while holding onto an important document which was slipped to her as she was leaving the ship.

    Tommy & Tuppence form the "Young Adventurers Ltd." and take on the dangerous job of finding the missing Jane Finn & the document before it is used by the government's "Secret Adversary" to create another European war.

    Very suspenseful with many Red Herrings, naivete, & romance.....
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Down-on-their-luck, a young couple hire themselves out as investigators.

    "The Secret Adversary" was Christie’s second novel, coming on the heels of seminal murder mystery "The Mysterious Affair at Styles". It was an unusual choice, combining detective and spy stories with a giddy, light-hearted feel. Most of her thrillers would fail in part for being too dour; those like "The Secret of Chimneys" and "Why Didn’t They Ask Evans?" that allow for some humour tend to succeed – at least, relatively so.

    Tommy Beresford and Prudence “Tuppence” Cowley are delightful and easy-going, suitably young, modern people in post-WWI England. It’s perhaps the best of Christie’s “thrillers”, and certainly the best of Tommy and Tuppence’s canon. Christie would revisit them sporadically over the next fifty years – and they would age along with the real world – but none of their remaining books would shine like this one; a real pity.

    Ultimately, the light-hearted nature of the piece doesn’t destroy the tension, but it certainly muffles it. And whenever Christie tried international intrigue, there was inevitably the feeling that she was making it all up as she went along. Still, "The Secret Adversary" is a lively romp, worthy of a fan’s interest.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    First of the Tommy and Tuppence books. It's shortly after the end of the Great War, and a pair of bright young things are finding peacetime both rather boring and rather financially restrictive. They decide to advertise themselves as "The young Adventurers", in the hope of finding a job. There follow many adventures in pursuit of a missing document, served with a large helping of fun and an even larger helping of red herrings. The politics are somewhat eyebrow-raising, but a reflection of the time when the book was written. I didn't find this as appealing as the Marple and Poirot stories, but it was a pleasant enough way to spend a few hours. It's still in print, but also now out of copyright in some countries and thus available on various public domain sites.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Recently, I decided to take a break from Monsieur Poirot and Miss Marple and get acquainted with Agatha Christie’s other beloved creations: Tommy and Tuppence. The Secret Adversary, her first T & T adventure written in 1922, seemed as good a place to start as any.This was my first encounter with the pair, though not with their type. Anyone raised on a diet of “McMillan and Wife,” “Hart to Hart,” “Moonlighting” and the “Thin Man” movies (like I was) will recognize Tommy and Tuppence almost as soon as the first words of repartee have fallen from their lips. I’m not sure how the other T & T novels (which include Partners in Crime, By the Pricking of My Thumbs, and Postern of Fate) stack up, but The Secret Adversary is a breezy romp with spies, double-crossings and perilous derring-do—not to mention cloaks and daggers. It bears small resemblance to Dame Agatha’s classic mystery novels, and leans more toward a screwball movie with snappy dialogue—one that might have starred Cary Grant and Ginger Rogers back in the day.This was only Christie’s second published book, written almost as a whim after the surprising success of The Mysterious Affair at Styles (1920). It’s far from a polished plot—coincidences strain the reader’s incredulity almost to the snapping point—but it certainly zips along with trademark Christie efficiency.The Secret Adversary opens aboard the sinking Lusitania in 1915. On the deck, a man approaches a young girl of about eighteen, and asks her to take a packet of papers since, per “women and children first,” she stands a better chance of surviving the shipwreck than he does. The girl takes the papers and climbs into the lifeboat.Next, we jump to a scene on a busy London street where two old acquaintances, Tommy and Tuppence, run into each other. They haven’t seen each other in several years and each is feeling a bit desperate and penniless in the postwar depression. Agatha’s description of the pair is priceless:(Tommy’s) face was pleasantly ugly—nondescript, yet unmistakably the face of a gentleman and a sportsman. His brown suit was well cut, but perilously near the end of its tether. They were an essentially modern-looking couple as they sat there. Tuppence had no claim to beauty, but there was character and charm in the elfin lines of her little face, with its determined chin and large, wide-apart eyes that looked mistily out from under straight, black brows. She wore a small bright green toque over her black bobbed hair, and her extremely short and rather shabby skirt revealed a pair of uncommonly dainty ankles. Her appearance presented a valiant attempt at smartness.They decide to pool their resources for a bite to eat and over lunch they devise a harebrained money-making scheme: The Young Adventurers, Ltd. They plan to put an ad in the newspaper—“Two young adventurers for hire. Willing to do anything, go anywhere. Pay must be good. No unreasonable offer refused.”Before they can get too far, however, adventures come their way. Tommy and Tuppence attract escapades like a light draws a moth. The plot tangles are too complex for me to explain here—and, besides, I wouldn’t want to rob you of the delicious delights of discovering them for yourself—but in a nutshell, they involve Tommy and Tuppence trying to track down a missing girl by the name of Jane Finn who, the British government believes, is carrying the packet of papers from the Lusitania. The papers contain embarrassing contents for the government and could be used by revolutionaries to stir unrest in the country. Joining T & T in their quest are an American millionaire, Julius P. Hersheimmer, and a distinguished British chap, Sir James Peel Edgerton. Vying against them is the mysterious, but ultra-nefarious “Mr. Brown,” the puppet master of a villainous criminal gang.Tommy and Tuppence get into and out of scrapes with head-spinning frequency. Nearly every chapter sees them either falling into the clutches of Mr. Brown’s men or being rescued by the “good guys.” Agatha keeps the pace spinning even faster as she splits up Tommy and Tuppence early in the book, thus broadening the series of adventures in which they find themselves.Agatha obviously had a lot of fun creating these non-Poirot, non-Marple characters, and the reader definitely reaps the benefits of her enjoyment. Though they’re still in the developmental stages in The Secret Adversary, Tommy and Tuppence show distinct signs of becoming the classic husband-and-wife spy team (yes, I’m giving away the fact that they get married in a later book). One British government official describes them thusly:Outwardly, he’s an ordinary, clean-limbed, rather block-headed young Englishman. Slow in his mental processes. On the other hand, it’s quite impossible to lead him astray through his imagination. He hasn’t got any—so he’s difficult to deceive. He worries things out slowly, and once he’s got hold of anything he doesn’t let go. The little lady’s quite different. More intuition and less common sense. They make a pretty pair working together. Pace and stamina.“Pace and stamina” is an accurate description of the novel’s qualities, too. Yes, the book has some pretty big leaps of logic and jaded readers will find their eyes soon becoming sore from all their rolling at all the heaps and heaps of coincidences; but setting those beginning-writer errors aside, The Secret Adversary can be an enjoyable read. It moves along from page to page with a light touch and nearly every chapter ends with a cliffhanger, which demands that you read “just one more chapter” before turning in for bed. Those who can’t resist will find themselves staying up way past their bedtime.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Though Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple were Agatha Christie’s best-known detectives, Tommy and Tuppence Beresford were perhaps her most dynamic. The only pair of Christie’s detectives to hold equal standing, the two were well matched: While not the cleverest, Tommy kept a tenacious hold on the facts, and was complemented by the more intellectually nimble Tuppence. They are also the only of Christie’s characters to age and change over time--from fresh-faced and full of excitement in The Secret Adversary (1922) to elderly and doddering in Postern of Fate (1973). We’re offering all four novels and the collection of stories (Partners in Crime) that feature the charismatic couple.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Secret Adversary by Agatha Christie is the first in her Tommy and Tuppence series that follows this young couple’s adventures. In this book, World War I is over and both Tommy, who has returned from the fighting, and Tuppence, who left her quiet home in a country vicarage and spent the war in various jobs, are finding peace time a little boring. They need to work but as members of the lost generation, they are also looking for something beyond the daily ho-hum life of the upper class. Craving excitement, they decide to set themselves up as paid adventurer’s, willing to take on just about anything, little knowing that their first case will involve international espionage, kidnapping and murder.An altogether fun book to read, the two main characters are delightful, and make excellent foils for each other. If you are a fan of Agatha Christie, I think you would enjoy reading about this young couple as they battle Bolsheviks and revolutionists, and come to realize how important they are to each other.Originally published in 1922, The Secret Adversary is a light, short read, a little dated to be sure, but I enjoyed the concept, timing and setting immensely. High in entertainment value, this is an enjoyable book to curl up with for a few hours and escape to a different time and place.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Not so much of a “Whodunit?” this, but more of a “Who is he?” The “he” being an elusive criminal mastermind known by name as Mr Brown but known in person by almost none. I guessed who he was early on in the story!This is also a “Where is she?” as another main plot is the search for a young lady who possesses some important papers. Mr Brown needs these papers, while “The Young Adventures” aim to thwart him.The two main characters are likeable and gel well together. I like Tuppence’s dialogue. She and Tommy are a pair of 22-year-olds yet much of the time they come across as young teenagers. In fact the book on the whole strikes me as a children’s book for adults, if such a thing is possible.The first three-quarters of the book appealed to me more than the last quarter. Somehow he seemed to lose some of the upbeat pace and become anti-climactic. Still, it was a good read nonetheless.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I found this Nadia May narration much enhanced my enjoyment of this first Tommy and Tuppence book. Also, my admiration for Christie's writing is greater with this reread as she managed to keep me guessing even though I thought I remembered the solution. Her red herrings were so plausible I kept second-guessing myself thinking I had mis-remembered it!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5


    Another good page turner.
    Nice to read about the beginning of Tommy and Tuppence.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is different from my usual Agatha Christie fare, I've read plenty of Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple but none of the Tommy and Tuppence which are more spy novels than detective stories. After the war when London had more people than jobs two old friend meet by chance and form a company “Young Adventurers Ltd.” ‘willing to do anything, go anywhere’, and it lands them in all sorts of trouble.

    The action is fast paced with plenty of twists, if you decide to read this remember it was written in 1922 and the expressions and settings are from that time period so some things may seem weird to you. I enjoyed it, the same style that Miss Christie had for mysteries works well with political intrigue.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A little bit too complicated for poor old me, but the Tuppence protagonist is a dear.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Book #2 of Agatha Christie's mysteries is completed. I like Tommy and Tuppence and I think it's a shame that they don't appear in more of her books. That said, the plot of this one is so ludicrous, I couldn't stop laughing... but I guess in 1922 it was what passed as literature for the masses.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The author's second novel and my second Agatha Christie book. Simple characters and story, but still had a clever twist.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    It's been a long time since I last read Agatha Christie, but I enjoyed this book as much as I did the ones I've read before. It's a fun, fast-paced adventure that is quick and easy to read.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A bit lighter version of Agatha Christie's mysteries centering on Tommy and Tuppence who advertise themselves as detectives and end up in an adventure they could not have imagined. Good entertainment.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Quite poor. There are some clues...but all the characters are so feckless and portentous. It's an interesting artifact of its time, 1922. Agatha Christie is staunchly conservative and very anti-communist."Whose Body" by Dorothy Sayers came out just a year later and was a good deal smarter. Of course, it was an actual mystery, not a suspense-cum-mystery novel.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Secret Adversary is cleverly written, with a lot of suspense, but it drags on if you have early figured out whothe mysterious Mr. Brown actually is. It also offers a fairy tale ending with little to suggest a sequel.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    More of a spy thriller than a traditional cozy whodunit from Christie, this is the first of the short Tommy and Tuppence series and deals with efforts to recover some diplomatic papers that were lost during WWI and which could cause all sorts of problems for England if they fall into the wrong hands in 1919 (when the story takes place). Not a bad effort, but a major table-setting plot point pushes suspension of disbelief to its limits, and the main red herring here was so obvious that it almost served as an anti-herring. Unless one was willing to believe that the person involved was beyond stupid, which I was not inclined to do.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This was the first Agatha Christie novel featuring Tommy and Tuppence as sleuths (of only four such, plus a collection of short stories). This was her second ever novel, published in 1922, and is redolent of the atmosphere of the time. To the modern reader, Tommy and Tuppence sound like 1920s stereotypes with their hyper-enthusiastic dialogue. The social mores feel only just post-Great War, with Tuppence being at the forefront of a generation of more assertive women, having done front line nursing during the war (I must record one comment on Tuppence's dress which is hilarious by modern standards, "her extremely short and rather shabby skirt revealed a pair of uncommonly dainty ankles"). The plot concerns some top secret diplomatic papers supposedly passed onto a survivor of the Lusitania by a secret agent who drowned in the sinking of the torpedoed ship, and the attempt by the authorities and others to locate them now the war is over to avoid unpleasant consequences. The hostiles attempting to seize the papers are a mixture of a mysterious "Mr Brown", Germans and Russian Bolsheviks, the latter of whom are allegedly using the British Labour Party in order to foment revolution in Britain (shades of the infamous forged "Zinoviev letter" published by the Daily Mail on the eve of the 1924 general election, which was held - though not necessarily accurately - to be the main reason why that election saw the defeat of the first minority Labour government). The way this hangs together is not convincing, but the novel is the usual page turner, with red herrings along the way as to the identity of "Mr Brown" (which I didn't find plausible). Not one of Christie's stronger novels.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It was a great read. I had narrowed down the identity of the villain to two people but could not determine who it was until the identity was revealed in the end. All the characters were likable as well.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The first Tommy and Tuppence book. Fun and whimsical.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The ending was just a little bit weaker than the rest of the book but overall it was a good novel with a suspense focus rather than a mystery focus. In fact, it's not hard to read it and imagine a young Alfred Hitchcock doing his movie take on the book (and I think it would have been a great one).
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Interesting premise. On a sinking Lusitania a women is passed government documents for the Allies as women and children were boarding lifeboats first. She disappears in London and Tommy and Tuppence's assignment is to find her and the papers. Tommy and Tuppence's naive reaction to the danger was unrealistic to me.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A short and entertaining read-- entertaining as much for its mystery as for the laughable sensationalism of its topic. It was very timely in 1922, stuffed to the brim with breathless observations about Bolsheviks and revolutions and Labour Party members and secret treaties and the Lusitania, and crowned with a hero and heroine full of jolly upper-class Britishness and levity, if not imagination, in tough spots. Very characteristic of an era. The mystery, though constructed out of sensationalistic and dated elements, has an excellent form. We are told quite frankly in the first few chapters that we will meet and actually come to trust the plotting, conniving, almost legendary Bad Guy before we know that he IS the Bad Guy-- and then we spend the rest of the book trying to figure out which of these friendly and sympathetic characters he is. Also, as in all good Christie, everyone's got their fingers in the pot somehow-- it feels active and alive at every moment. Christie manages to keep each character's critical discoveries secret from us until the end, but even though we're lagging far behind most of the characters we don't quite feel stupid because we, as the readers, have our own theories that we don't necessarily want to be spoiled. A very very short one. Read it in an afternoon for a good laugh.

Book preview

The Secret Adversary - Agatha Christie

'Oabook_preview_excerpt.html|[rIV2Y5ݝ92(bDiDTp!W-b>z0ۘJsϘ<<ܯǹ/޷y[nϷyq2|6xŧ_^<.4]>E۫K,O/n.qEch8&yz~.͐]ݼξOُߟ__ƹW!=5ߧq[gMVvv~\fow./e㸪|f&LYzݻr]ͻ! l Z>WzIﳕ XrbWˆ.o&˛}]͟V{}F,cQ%0]?L\ /]m Pb% uHԨϜ5d~M򉱟m+?e:O&xc^8i6Ȇ7K{rp=;n6w<1k ]6{_E'G}振!ce3|r?ϟ|籓NuM/1&ns.%gߧCOe~io|/{FtfW iP ==ZG)aB}woR=5QB᛼@o2=B貏pfnb=<|[Y "~.޽n~̾xnd>_N :#z%_fx n >\^\O37~y \\@}yz?>M3^>\ .vY/`8n`F=ƿ}ߌ9׻V?ɶ9, a]]p+X woȑ /+WNKXxh:8ǦBcd90+[Gĵ,mS> &,fBh`rhZL LK;cl;+lPcSݰF'-f^T/+~(X ĎBY_\oX-p*bO:t8 \R8.mPaEen{d.poBi@ _YLxj>Z\Ky7.#R+% axD4BtЛt}E@vk`z1Bg'lKV+M"H Wl54+N}59'V:ȵ/41ݳ/sj\ٱa M*?rcw$URP,HnL ˠoute/އEb" 'Q%8ׁIevYJWy:5q3䀼 7AѢE;ҸCPLigZty?j?m<_흌[T䃧%%~ eBg͐I d│eW=lD7@4{;~圧qzMcR\׉w|ҼwZ$db+3$Lڊ>jQ: ˹gE6,uBUF wb!R$†85g.0:(pT6tA C,HCDr35kPEHF0#x}BL}ozXE Z|Z*|+odl<o`2 q*^M&0% ! 5fkk/9n]B1ZhEhrq/FZiZKC]9tPcS?cӆvqDerbmPJ/wncB')?,*q-\|^i~oh_`Gx7r~܉0`G)W}tid+lK0AoP%}6h_]fwju8v<)åg391HϤ3tsjĭқuHF9n)'y=BՎFIPNxy7?$x"RZ*HƓ8/`fH bmJFN"( h l NG:Ȭ|##]r1È46cD]EsG@E'|01y Bf^f<& 6^Pߛqfƌ?Ѵs-]V+h~}/q"g3501梇$D uPB][lgN@с`8d> N]Kafx,Ӈx̣12q#Z%7'`J =H[v%6PM8GXAn'YFSʋ䛕AN<DcĆThȞLAn/"gޔa\!{M53ݬ: bVM왠:UTc = GTųhvycl O1*l WE@/QP Rh`Gv ? d,:D 15%Bea^q3^"]ASfG#kU1S!Umpޛ".{\cxpbwXi`j.o{M2%\I@ʢ3u>T|ۉ8NIgJ0o Z#ߞ M^Vȣ>4Du8F@ X頷 <mmlP;nhk"|25åF>/5]≯U-ٗe<ű~2I5`R1~6 ¤t!9OL#ta8mQ(qD^H腽N"n(RT',Rg -lpTƔriNLJr( $;#܊K1! Մ+ Q"L}t1㓆%T:2!&:xW+|b&l1̊L- Y^|:YZSЬeuA1$hխ x[9< {"Y ,F%YvS(` 7JGm9c#[|=*q"\8ٕEz 0 0Dǿ=IPK㭒wVig2r:苮®AA `\8f\Cu OBG'I4>_/JDƖ;|œMn"mY,k_ph"F?o-f&G_Dœ[)(LY>`9wb${8w>:'eWПk5 *g)rf#,VHr.z5gj6H4Ht>3&đ&ӸhA9o<(Cx{,e۶%u9g%czՍh4yPx29x>Iq z?/|((ɳ-q}g^O׾ysh3*)CUBd [X;Fl뾅Խ£EZ8'gNj)y3;3h\]1v;O,ռC 6jRT&8sa^pIA+4^:%]fUYy+P?t(,xpSHJ僰]LUzNvCT z1L\gT7rn.E0P 5#OL˩#TEyAEÒ+4 s./,ub &4ʁ҅-+]lSDS)Yi7GNsbcd :Spv+bnCW(C+-(X r S} 3W:(65ܘ[9ԗ,a&ԍ1CM\mYn"T>KlG~ +Ɓ U̝yHiv3AQA@P<~ǻaϓSFF)u'D,aN!ib>o?a8aY[lGq:^c``D(Q}M4ie\I>Si"|b6s ExT}sri~ܜ8ғYa a< fŀ{*:ΒoXHO}/[N_%o"J,+s]GӉ0 ey\vD.z4D4+ (9eܑKVS-XGHpi$SkVYlH0Mܴ35aR>LYASN6WF狼!E{J[D&bgRӷ馳ct 4vwHXӗVj@L[JC[Z Ks(Jʜ3HR7YC7:9'yм.U4ŁV*ǭ:>+les>q_@|';e~S4/ E{W uL:gۈSƨgϼcV2@D:Vg2MTP `5R/ҸQwM qp["*LFUuo1dQZ}fChQM-pg/ *¸^ZrJ 4WF}ux e*g@&,2&Q}?JLh3Ն|- ~.)KЩPco5M4 M&Bf h#\PQ町TPsV% йfrR_HvEMRp:'чHe'N[.2  (N{r=`1Cv8n\,vGU &ܒ{:Pm]2mCZ ޔPA3* sV"Mѱ<pzlSʲU-bᅋX?V;I>  a/0U6SVKt-lKP՞W =eݲgb% l#<0=k$ 6JK7ٓ.;HHhJ-N5i:Bs\jM }mL)m޵dkuOD0@^j¸L{]چ K'VXU6~-:Oml9(Cmi%V4&,]D+jU2[73:O?rbtꉸ rY;ZbOWTz8xFi>U!E,<0 Aa2ABM3R4NWy~ficeDdjցd307Zw%JC Y~DQ:1_vy.Ū\7P 򤴚U [8QйN4 ?lQp.pϷs'f^s3KT E*V6 g{ `wNY$8Wז8D/V~t;j٧ǔ4~P2U h)'0+ ?iDž*"&K0n>Zag .,_z6SuNlQH-ǭlz,:OxvL  Bղ)}>n /l0xV>YB{zC y-ExR}^Iˁf?JTm/h%¦Jf0)lCSo kCb)4ܦČ Y,cqTn(CaPY\5̬OM31bdŽ_Uw`N@RVdri4f4CE\Ռ2cA*&,* oH뵪bU_ǜ;'m'%~pC˲4f1{Y?r#`2ɖ)jzlk:Nx8QHWfx'{9NkU/B'xy9;IjYLzA:F=STQTQ畛6=.F;AluKAW]t~@m2/A=!٩跙S.^fV~YP=cCΙ eg؆N6OѬ Q`OJEaXٕYm_{6)_[X1SF3Gs;̧.cUoL􅒚͓!cH0Lw`1wۏc_1ѓCL SPNn d Ell.jL(˫>΃8PS`\bwm,}ʑ2HϤa6ؿK/*,r2;l` irߺ)f3q<.߿Tldj^;!Ya;K~drV$?}$y8P-q;e)HbblwAz(knbx6;&cq94+Z9tCOo+G/gVd3/cvEULǶk_,MB8L1̊Dz\H R7A0"xZTF#mzxA\^bp Il^c웴Mn.."~h#c ΋?ɿW>ݛjE$CO/tvK{*XXѢt`7jtF+F(^AI01a5G!*x1%@WRpr`+ewcA%O똭EKυ靹psAIӦ;jj`i(gT'27Ǯ5g6~ *${'M26 : %t6eG6~oޑIȬF,ƚپRm?Dz!;Yy+xsg)ױ Qllk0/+Fx2k`qT9 Flzo^nX?yjV(A-Dv/H$$COeXBQ//գ1F`3; ﺳzlm/VD]fH_ Yngh|xȣrK[a׃x ?JjJ]C%Կr& :ط6yugF `lB>gezdgA \ ]$utsoӨ~y᧒?>ߠ5ׂu4u tB툍hq)WvV."Zg/Oxxgvpw$`i͘0r,(y$vGTߦu2P膭f1)DB{cE,nх=1?`PGFu42ק{.t=n𰅙}iuqtP&'.͕bJ>^Gb=½.ySXl,7.dDW`#iq@/l+"2P0S=9|B7&b-^ېV+cf۬Kgz4k1XڪVIBkRXs~=tɞzc[Zņ-=۰WM*/X $ ǵj͑t i9A1`nO t|objc5{k| Ҽ&3Pl^ߌ쿃RֺABֱ}6 CS+5S췈Z>f+bs]y(2<]Ux Åɱv36)-kg% җ !^fVC0<
Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1