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

857,304 views ・ 2022-08-18

TED-Ed


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Agatha Christie is the best-selling novelist of all time.
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But in 1916, she wasn’t even the most promising writer in her family.
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Her older sister Madge had already written several short stories,
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while Agatha hadn’t published any.
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So when Agatha shared her desire to write a mystery novel,
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Madge scoffed.
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She bet that Agatha wouldn’t be able to create a compelling mystery—
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and certainly not something she couldn't solve.
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Today, the novel that came of that bet
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stands alongside almost 100 other mysteries written by Christie,
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each one a cleverly constructed puzzle box
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of clues, misdirection, and human drama.
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So let's investigate how she crafted these perfect crimes.
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Christie designed her stories in many ways,
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but one of the most important decisions was the setting.
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From a remote island to a snow-stalled train car,
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she favored locations isolated from society.
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By restricting the scope of her stories,
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Christie limited possible suspects and built tension
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by forcing characters to stay put—
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even with a killer among them.
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Sometimes she further heightened the drama
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by making the characters strangers,
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unsure who they can trust.
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But while her settings are eerie and extraordinary,
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her characters are just the opposite.
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One of the biggest criticisms of Christie’s novels
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is that they’re full of two-dimensional people.
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But Christie avoided complex characters for a reason.
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By reducing people to a handful of simple traits,
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she provided readers with predictable suspects.
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Well, usually predictable.
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Christie also used the audience's expectations against them.
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However, this typecasting sometimes relied on
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what contemporary readers know to be harmful stereotypes.
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She frequently caricatured particular occupations and ethnic groups
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for comic effect,
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reinforcing the prejudices of her time.
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This is certainly not an element of Christie’s work worth emulating,
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and fortunately, many modern mystery writers
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have found less problematic ways to use this technique.
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Even when she got it wrong,
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Christie worked to make her characters feel authentic.
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She closely observed the people around her,
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and constantly scribbled down details from overheard conversations.
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She would then rearrange these details to piece her mysteries together,
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often switching who the murderer was as she worked.
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This approach kept information murky and disoriented even the sharpest readers.
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However, there’s an important balance to strike
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between being clever and being confusing.
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Nobody wants to read a predictable mystery,
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but if things get too convoluted you can lose your reader altogether.
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Christie handled this in part by keeping her language simple and accessible.
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She used short sentences and clear, snappy dialogue
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to help readers follow information.
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This kind of clarity is essential,
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because the best mysteries string their audience along
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with a carefully laid trail of clues.
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With Christie, a good clue is one the reader will remember,
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but usually, fail to completely understand.
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For example, when a character cries that “Everything tastes foul today,”
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just minutes before he dies,
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the reader races to determine who poisoned his beverage.
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But they’re likely failing to truly consider this clue.
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If everything tasted foul that day,
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then he’d been poisoned long before that drink.
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Christie also used clues to intentionally mislead her audience.
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For example, readers might recognize a clue associated with one suspect,
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only to learn that it was being used to frame them.
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Other times, she built misdirection directly into the story’s structure—
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like when a narrator reporting the murder is revealed to be the killer.
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Outside crime and clues,
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there’s one more ingredient in Christie’s formula:
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the detective.
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Christie created many sleuths,
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but her most enduring are Hercule Poirot and Miss Jane Marple.
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Neither this petit Belgian refugee nor this elderly amateur detective
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are traditional heroes.
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But their outsider status is exactly what helps them slip past security
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and make suspects let their guard down.
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As you might have guessed, Agatha won her sister’s bet.
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Her eccentric detectives, clever clues, and simplified suspects
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form a blueprint that has stumped countless readers.
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And now that you've uncovered her strategies,
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the only mystery left is what stories you can tell with these secrets.
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