221B Baker Street Christmas!
I'm making my house a Murder Mystery Christmas. My newest acquisition is a Department 56 Literary Classics model of Sherlock Holmes' house, with Sherlock and Watson!
It's all set for the season with garland and wreath, a table full of tiny British Xmas foods, a Christmas tree, and three annoying carolers. Miss Marple, Father Brown, and Hercule Poirot watch over them like Guardian Angels.
Dr. Moriarty left them a plum pudding. I don't think they'll eat it.
A better look at the two.
143 notes
·
View notes
One of the reasons of why I'm thinking of leaving David Lee without a Miraculous is because Hilda doesn't get one either, and it's kind of unbalanced to leave her the only positive member of the family without one. To her I don't give a Miraculous (if I did, she'd be a Turtle) because first, there are already too many involved with the AU version of the novel, second, I see no place to make it meaningfully working for her narratively, third, I see no way to give it to her and her having it for independent reasons would be too many coincidences.
3 notes
·
View notes
The last book of the 2022 Read Christie challenge ans probably my last book of the year (unless i can finish half of AGOT in the next 3 days).
Hercule Poirot's Christmas is set from Dec 22-27 with each chapter taking place on a different day. I mostly tried to read the chapters on their corresponsing days which was fun (though admittedly i did fall a lil behind over christmas eve/day). It wasn't as festive as I was expecting a book set over christmas to be but the murder was quite gruesome so that makes sense lmao. None of those poison shenanigans this time, its a proper bloody one.
I think 1 part in the solution would have made more sense to a contemporary audience than it does today but otherwise it was good!
9 notes
·
View notes
I have to admit something. One of my favorite Ace Attorney fics…
I read it before I played a single game. I don’t remember what exactly spurred me into reading the entire Phoenix Wright Wikipedia but I did and then I read this wondrous fic.
Btw, it’s The Wedding Planner. I literally still think about it today.
4 notes
·
View notes
221B Baker Street with the lights on & tiny cakes.
Turned the lights on in Sherlock & Watson's flat.
Holmes' violin.
Sherlock's "Consulting Detective" sign.
The British Christmas feast.
And lots for dessert.
I've included Chinese take-out and Saki my Jewish boyfriend and I sometimes get when we're too lazy to cook.
My cat, Hana, skeptically watching me take photos.
FYI the Department 56 set was a gift, but you can find them on eBay. But if you're looking to buy, read descriptions carefully. Some sets aren't complete, or are only partial.
16 notes
·
View notes
Dedication at the beginning of Hercule Poirot's Christmas.
Agatha Christie's brother in law James Watts complained that there wasn't enough blood in her stories, so she wrote him one with lots of it! And in this case, blood has more than one meaning.
It's one of Agatha's best works.
2 notes
·
View notes
Some musings on the central themes of Dame Agatha's novels.
Starting from Poirot novels. The first three formulated similarly by someone I know and agree with, slightly reworded by me, others are my thoughts.
Some spoilers for The ABC Murders and Evil Under the Sun ahead.
Murder on the Orient Express:
Justice. Including the question if the justice of conscience always matches the law.
Murder of Roger Ackroyd:
Fall of a person. Even someone kind, smart, caring, talented and overall sympathetic is in danger of temptations like greed and cowardice. Avoid the wrong path.
The ABC Murders:
Stigma. Someone alone, weak and especially mentally ill can easily become treated like a monster, while the true monsters more often than not are someone prosperous and healthy willing to transfer the consequences of their crimes to a defenseless person.
Death on the Nile:
Blind love/devotion. Even a selfless passion for someone can become twisted and cause corruption if it's enabling and obsessive.
Evil Under the Sun:
Lust and attention-seeking. Not only it's detrimental to your relationship/family, it makes you an easy victim for a pretty face willing to flatter you.
Hercule Poirot' s Christmas:
Arrogance. If you think yourself superior to the "regular fools" and in the right to toy with people's feelings and issues, one day you run into someone like you who will outwit you and make you suffer for what you caused to them.
Learning to overcome the haunting of past trauma.
Actions in a difficult situation are what shows one's true self. This includes a passive person learning to make decisions.
"Fighting evil" motivated by pride and revenge can make you a monster like your enemy if not worse.
Appointment with Death:
Unhealthy desire for power over people. More often than not the person like that just doesn't want to realise they are pathetic person. Also, one day you may bite off more than you can chew.
Domestic emotional abuse, varying reactions to it (apathy, embitterment, escapism) and ways to free yourself/help freeing someone from its power.
Five Little Pigs:
Righting the past wrongs. (On several levels.)
Big consequences of small things. Sometimes a misunderstanding, a badly-thought white lie or ill-timed joke can cause or contribute to tragedy.
Revenge doesn't make you happy.
Sometimes a family that looks weird from side can actually be harmonious in their own way.
Taken at the Flood:
Feeling lost. Almost everyone in this story starts with the ground being knocked from under their feet one way or another.
Perilous chase of fortune. (This is a fatal flaw of more than one character, and what the title of the novel refers to, being a poetry quote)
6 notes
·
View notes