Sunday, March 30, 2025

The Adventure of the Egyptian Tomb by Agatha Christie ( A Hercule Poirot Short Story)

 

Publication Date: 
September 26, 1923

Genre:

Cozy Historical Mystery Short Story


Series: Hercule Poirot

Length:   35 pages




Book description courtesy of Goodreads

In Agatha Christie’s short story, “The Adventure of the Egyptian Tomb,” the widow of a famous Egyptologist consults Poirot on the suspicious death of her husband and an American financier, Bleibner. The mystery takes Poirot and Hastings to Egypt to investigate the site of an archaeological dig. But who could want the two men dead? This short story originally appeared in the September 26, 1923 issue of The Sketch magazine.

My Thoughts:

This is a short story, which I'm usually not a fan of but Egypt and Poirot I will give a try! I watched the television version last year and loved it but when I saw how short the story was I wondered how they'd make a whole show out of it. But it was good and followed the story well. 

The characters were surprisingly well fleshed out in a few pages and I found myself sympathetic to some who were clearly not the murderer. The supernatural element was fun even thought the tomb depicted, wasn't real. It of course plays on the opening at that time of the tomb of King Tut and the belief that those involved were cursed. Here we have a great story in which the wife of one of the victims wants to get to the bottom of how it all happened, curse or not because she wants her son to take over and is worried about his safety. Poirot, as usual, has a more practical take on it. He and Hastings, his beloved sidekick, are on alert and investigate it all. 

There were some interesting additions of medical terminology and history that I won't give away due to spoilers but I always like learning more along the way about things outside of the story. There is also a scene where Poirot sets a trap of sorts that is fun. You are kept guessing until the end and it's amazing how she wraps everything up in just 35 pages. I am looking forward to reading more of these short stories just due to the way she manages to make you think "how on earth is this going to be solved so quickly?"

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