Marple: The Idol House of Astarte

It’s the turn of Dr. Pender, “the elderly clergyman of the parish,” to tell a mystery story to the Tuesday Night Club, and he comes through with a preposterous tale about a house party that goes wrong when a guest, “one of the notorious beauties of the Season,” takes on the persona of the goddess Astarte and strikes the host dead.

There’s a video I remember watching a while ago that had the magician Penn Jillette explaining various magic tricks seen in movies, and when remarking on the transportation booth in The Prestige he says that it’s a bad trick if there’s only one way it could be done. Which is basically the same idea as Holmes’s famous dictum that “When you have eliminated all which is impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.” Such an approach made solving the mystery here pretty straightforward, as the various attempts at an explanation put forward by the Club members (a javelin, “mass hypnotism,” etc.) are absurd. So pretty much what you think happened at first is in fact what happened. Miss Marple comes to the right conclusion precisely by not indulging her imagination, and cutting everyone else off short by saying “Of course there is only one way poor Sir Richard could have been stabbed.” I think in one of Christie’s novels she would have indulged something a little (or a lot) more improbable, but in a short story there’s no time for that so the obvious solution had to be the correct one as well.

The retired police commissioner also manages to identify the killer’s real identity despite Dr. Pender changing the names in his telling of the story. I thought this an odd note to end on, and it made me wonder if Christie might have had someone specific in mind.

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9 thoughts on “Marple: The Idol House of Astarte

  1. I think Christie might have had you in mind. the phrase ‘elderly gentleman of the parish’ was often used to describe you, in fact, I think its a verbatim quote from your school report card, reflecting your ancient view of life and worn-out philosophies. Christie felt it wasnt ideal, since there was only one way it could be done, but stabbling you with a javelin proved popular with her readers and she went on to write more Miss Marple books as a result.

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