The secret formula to Agatha Christie's murder mysteries - Jamie Bernthal

838,976 views ・ 2022-08-18

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
Agatha Christie is the best-selling novelist of all time.
0
6794
4213
00:11
But in 1916, she wasn’t even the most promising writer in her family.
1
11007
5172
00:16
Her older sister Madge had already written several short stories,
2
16304
3754
00:20
while Agatha hadn’t published any.
3
20058
2168
00:22
So when Agatha shared her desire to write a mystery novel,
4
22602
3545
00:26
Madge scoffed.
5
26147
1460
00:27
She bet that Agatha wouldn’t be able to create a compelling mystery—
6
27940
3963
00:31
and certainly not something she couldn't solve.
7
31903
2669
00:34
Today, the novel that came of that bet
8
34947
2336
00:37
stands alongside almost 100 other mysteries written by Christie,
9
37283
4588
00:41
each one a cleverly constructed puzzle box
10
41954
3003
00:44
of clues, misdirection, and human drama.
11
44957
3379
00:48
So let's investigate how she crafted these perfect crimes.
12
48544
3837
00:52
Christie designed her stories in many ways,
13
52590
2669
00:55
but one of the most important decisions was the setting.
14
55259
3254
00:58
From a remote island to a snow-stalled train car,
15
58805
3253
01:02
she favored locations isolated from society.
16
62058
3295
01:05
By restricting the scope of her stories,
17
65686
2378
01:08
Christie limited possible suspects and built tension
18
68064
3503
01:11
by forcing characters to stay put—
19
71567
2503
01:14
even with a killer among them.
20
74070
2294
01:16
Sometimes she further heightened the drama
21
76739
2669
01:19
by making the characters strangers,
22
79408
2086
01:21
unsure who they can trust.
23
81494
2210
01:24
But while her settings are eerie and extraordinary,
24
84330
3212
01:27
her characters are just the opposite.
25
87542
2335
01:30
One of the biggest criticisms of Christie’s novels
26
90294
2586
01:32
is that they’re full of two-dimensional people.
27
92880
2670
01:35
But Christie avoided complex characters for a reason.
28
95758
3128
01:38
By reducing people to a handful of simple traits,
29
98886
3295
01:42
she provided readers with predictable suspects.
30
102181
3253
01:45
Well, usually predictable.
31
105434
2002
01:48
Christie also used the audience's expectations against them.
32
108187
4254
01:52
However, this typecasting sometimes relied on
33
112567
3169
01:55
what contemporary readers know to be harmful stereotypes.
34
115736
3838
01:59
She frequently caricatured particular occupations and ethnic groups
35
119782
4088
02:03
for comic effect,
36
123870
1334
02:05
reinforcing the prejudices of her time.
37
125329
2545
02:07
This is certainly not an element of Christie’s work worth emulating,
38
127874
3586
02:11
and fortunately, many modern mystery writers
39
131460
2670
02:14
have found less problematic ways to use this technique.
40
134130
3211
02:17
Even when she got it wrong,
41
137842
1418
02:19
Christie worked to make her characters feel authentic.
42
139260
3128
02:22
She closely observed the people around her,
43
142597
2502
02:25
and constantly scribbled down details from overheard conversations.
44
145099
4671
02:30
She would then rearrange these details to piece her mysteries together,
45
150104
4296
02:34
often switching who the murderer was as she worked.
46
154400
3420
02:37
This approach kept information murky and disoriented even the sharpest readers.
47
157987
5214
02:43
However, there’s an important balance to strike
48
163492
2586
02:46
between being clever and being confusing.
49
166078
2711
02:48
Nobody wants to read a predictable mystery,
50
168789
2336
02:51
but if things get too convoluted you can lose your reader altogether.
51
171125
3921
02:55
Christie handled this in part by keeping her language simple and accessible.
52
175504
5089
03:01
She used short sentences and clear, snappy dialogue
53
181719
3378
03:05
to help readers follow information.
54
185097
2169
03:07
This kind of clarity is essential,
55
187558
1877
03:09
because the best mysteries string their audience along
56
189435
2961
03:12
with a carefully laid trail of clues.
57
192396
2503
03:15
With Christie, a good clue is one the reader will remember,
58
195233
3503
03:18
but usually, fail to completely understand.
59
198736
3212
03:22
For example, when a character cries that “Everything tastes foul today,”
60
202698
4338
03:27
just minutes before he dies,
61
207036
2085
03:29
the reader races to determine who poisoned his beverage.
62
209121
3587
03:32
But they’re likely failing to truly consider this clue.
63
212833
3379
03:37
If everything tasted foul that day,
64
217004
2544
03:39
then he’d been poisoned long before that drink.
65
219548
3546
03:43
Christie also used clues to intentionally mislead her audience.
66
223928
4171
03:48
For example, readers might recognize a clue associated with one suspect,
67
228266
4921
03:53
only to learn that it was being used to frame them.
68
233187
3003
03:56
Other times, she built misdirection directly into the story’s structure—
69
236774
4713
04:01
like when a narrator reporting the murder is revealed to be the killer.
70
241487
4087
04:06
Outside crime and clues,
71
246242
1835
04:08
there’s one more ingredient in Christie’s formula:
72
248077
3170
04:11
the detective.
73
251247
1418
04:12
Christie created many sleuths,
74
252665
2002
04:14
but her most enduring are Hercule Poirot and Miss Jane Marple.
75
254667
4296
04:19
Neither this petit Belgian refugee nor this elderly amateur detective
76
259171
4380
04:23
are traditional heroes.
77
263551
1668
04:25
But their outsider status is exactly what helps them slip past security
78
265219
4797
04:30
and make suspects let their guard down.
79
270016
2210
04:32
As you might have guessed, Agatha won her sister’s bet.
80
272685
3295
04:36
Her eccentric detectives, clever clues, and simplified suspects
81
276105
4087
04:40
form a blueprint that has stumped countless readers.
82
280192
3254
04:43
And now that you've uncovered her strategies,
83
283696
2294
04:45
the only mystery left is what stories you can tell with these secrets.
84
285990
4338
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7