Sparkling Cyanide

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Sparkling Cyanide
Sparkling Cyanide US First Edition Cover 1945.jpg
Dust-jacket illustration of the US (true first) edition. See Publication history (below) for UK first edition jacket image.
Author Agatha Christie
CountryUnited Kingdom
United States
LanguageEnglish
Genre Crime novel
Publisher Dodd, Mead and Company
Publication date
February 1945
Media typePrint (hardcover & paperback)
Pages209 (first edition, hardcover)
Preceded by Death Comes as the End  
Followed by The Hollow  

Sparkling Cyanide is a work of detective fiction by British writer Agatha Christie, first published in the US by Dodd, Mead and Company in February 1945 under the title of Remembered Death [1] and in UK by the Collins Crime Club in the December of the same year under Christie's original title. [2] The US edition retailed at $2.00 [1] and the UK edition at eight shillings and sixpence (8/6). [2]

Contents

The novel features the recurring character of Colonel Race for his last appearance to solve the mysterious deaths of a married couple, exactly one year apart. The plot of this novel expands the plot of a short story, "Yellow Iris".

Plot summary

One year earlier, seven people sat down to dinner at the Luxembourg restaurant. One, Rosemary Barton, never got up; instead she collapsed and died. The coroner ruled her death suicide by poisoning, due to post-flu depression. However, each of the guests had reason to want her dead:

After Rosemary's death, her aunt Lucilla Drake moves in with George and Iris. She shows blind loyalty to her son, Victor, who is constantly requesting money from the family. Anthony returns to town from travel and forms a friendship with Iris. Six months later, George receives anonymous letters saying that Rosemary was murdered. George investigates and decides to repeat the dinner at the same restaurant, with the same guests, plus an actress who looks like his late wife, and who is meant to arrive late and startle the murderer into making a confession. A few days after the one-year anniversary of Rosemary's death, the dinner is held, ostensibly to celebrate Iris's eighteenth birthday. The actress does not arrive and George dies at the table – poisoned, like his wife, by cyanide in his champagne. His death might have been judged as suicide, but George shared his concerns and some of his plan with his friend Colonel Race.

Stephen is interrogated by the police, who suspect him of the two murders. However, Colonel Race suspects that Anthony killed Rosemary to silence her and is now pursuing Iris for her wealth, inherited from Rosemary. However, upon meeting him he realizes Anthony is not a criminal at all, but is really a government agent. Iris confesses to Anthony that after George's death, she discovered cyanide in her purse, making it appear that the murderer was attempting to frame her.

After more investigating, Race incorrectly presumes the murderer to be Iris, but Anthony (after a trick with Race’s, Anthony’s and Chief Inspector Kemp’s drinks) has figured it all out.

Anthony realizes that Iris was the intended victim, not George, and Ruth was conspiring with Victor Drake (who she hoped to marry) to ensure he would inherit the family money. After the entertainment, George proposed a toast to Iris, when all sip champagne except her. When the group left the table to dance, Iris dropped her bag; a young waiter, retrieving it, misplaces it at the seat adjacent to hers. When, in the dark, the group returned to the table, Iris sat next to her original seat because of the misplaced bag. Everyone else therefore sat one seat away from where they were. George sat at Iris's original seat and drank the poisoned champagne. The anonymous letters to George were sent by Ruth, who then encouraged him to re-stage the dinner at the Luxembourg so that Victor and Ruth could kill Iris, as they killed Rosemary. To support a decision of suicide, Ruth had planted a packet of cyanide in Iris's bag, which packet dropped to the floor when she pulled her handkerchief out, without touching it (no fingerprints on it). Victor acted as a waiter, to drop the poison in the champagne during the show.

When this plot fails, Ruth attempts to run Iris over with a car, which the latter shrugs off as an accident. Colonel Race, together with the police and Anthony, unravel the truth in time to save Iris from Ruth. Her last attempt at killing Iris is to knock her unconscious in her bedroom, then turn on the fireplace gas, and leave the house. Anthony and Colonel Race break into Iris's room in the nick of time and revive her.

Victor is taken at New York at the request of the police and Ruth is caught as well. The case solved, the Farradays reaffirm their love for each other and Iris and Anthony make plans to marry.

Characters

Short story and novel development and comparison

The plot of this novel is an expansion of a Hercule Poirot short story entitled "Yellow Iris," which had previously been published in issue 559 of the Strand Magazine in July 1937 and in book form in The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories in the US in 1939. It was published in book form in the UK in Problem at Pollensa Bay in 1991.

The full-length novel has Colonel Race as the central investigative character in place of Poirot, who had that role in the short story. The novel uses the basics of the short story, including the method of the poisoning, but changes the identity of the culprit(s) – not for the first time, when Christie rewrote her own work.

Literary significance and reception

The book was not reviewed in The Times Literary Supplement .

Maurice Richardson, in the 13 January 1946 issue of The Observer wrote, "Agatha Christie readers are divided into two groups: first, fans like me who will put up with any amount of bamboozling for the sake of the pricking suspense, the close finish, six abreast, of the suspect race, and the crashing chord of the trick solution; second, knockers who complain it isn't cricket and anyway there's nothing to it.
Fans, I guarantee will be quite happy with Sparkling Cyanide, a high income group double murder, first of wayward smarty Rosemary, second of dull husband George at his lunatic reconstruction-of-the-crime party. It is too forced to rank with her best Number One form, but the suspect race is up to scratch and readability is high. Making allowances for six years of spam and cataclysm, quite a credible performance." [4]

An unnamed reviewer in the Toronto Daily Star of 24 February 1945 said, "Suspense is well maintained and suspicion well divided. While this mystery lacks Hercule Poirot, it should nevertheless please all Agatha Christie fans, especially those who like the murders in the fast, sophisticated set." [5]

Robert Barnard: "Murder in the past, previously accepted as suicide. Upper-class tart gets her come-uppance in smart London restaurant, and husband later suffers the same fate. Compulsively told, the strategies of deception smart as a new pin, and generally well up to 'forties standard. But the solution takes more swallowing than cyanided champagne." [6]

Adaptations

TV

In 1983, CBS writers Robert Malcolm Young, Sue Grafton and Steven Humphrey adapted the book into a television film, directed by Robert Michael Lewis, set in modern day California and starring Anthony Andrews as the central character, Tony Browne, with Deborah Raffin as Iris Murdoch, Pamela Bellwood as Ruth Lessing, Josef Sommer as George Barton, David Huffman and June Chadwick as Stephen and Sandra Farraday, Nancy Marchand as Lucilla Drake, and Christine Belford as Rosemary Barton. This adaptation did not feature Colonel Race. [7]

In 1993, the short story that served as the basis for this novel, The Yellow Iris , was adapted for television by Anthony Horowitz and directed by Peter Barber-Fleming in an episode of the ITV series Agatha Christie's Poirot starring David Suchet.

In late 2003, it was loosely adapted by Laura Lamson for ITV1, again in a modern setting, and involving a football manager's wife's murder. In this adaptation Colonel Race was renamed Colonel Geoffrey Reece, and given a partner, his wife, Dr. Catherine Kendall. The byplay between Reece (played by Oliver Ford Davies) and Kendall (played by Pauline Collins) was somewhat similar to Christie's characters Tommy and Tuppence.

In 2013, it was adapted as an episode of the French television series Les Petits Meurtres d'Agatha Christie .

Radio

In 2012, a three-part adaptation by Joy Wilkinson was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 directed by Mary Peate, with Naomi Frederick as Iris, Amanda Drew as Ruth, Colin Tierney as Anthony, James Lailey as Stephen, Sean Baker as Colonel Race and Jasmine Hyde as Rosemary.

Publication history

Dustjacket illustration of the UK First Edition (Book was first published in the US) Sparkling Cyanide First Edition Cover 1945.jpg
Dustjacket illustration of the UK First Edition (Book was first published in the US)

The novel's first true publication was the serialisation in The Saturday Evening Post in eight instalments from 15 July (Volume 216, Number 3) to 2 September 1944 (Volume 217, Number 10) under the title Remembered Death with illustrations by Hy Rubin.

The novel was first serialised, heavily abridged, in the UK in the Daily Express starting on Monday, 9 July 1945 and running for eighteen instalments until Saturday, 28 July 1945. The first instalment carried an uncredited illustration. [8]

No.DatePages No.
14,069Monday July 9 19452
14,070Tuesday July 10 19452
14,071Wednesday July 11 19452
14,072Thursday July 12 19452
14,073Friday July 13 19452
14,074Saturday July 14 19452
14,075Monday July 16 19452
14,076Tuesday July 17 19452
14,077Wednesday July 18 19452
14,078Thursday July 19 19452
14,079Friday July 20 19452
14,080Saturday July 21 19452
14,081Monday July 23 19452
14,082Tuesday July 24 19452
14,083Wednesday July 25 19452
14,084Thursday July 26 19452
14,085Friday July 27 19454
14,086Saturday July 28 19452

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References

  1. 1 2 "American Tribute to Agatha Christie". The Golden Years 1945 - 1952. Retrieved 7 June 2015.
  2. 1 2 Chris Peers; Ralph Spurrier; Jamie Sturgeon (March 1999). Collins Crime Club – A checklist of First Editions (Second ed.). Dragonby Press. p. 15.
  3. Christie, Agatha (2012). Sparkling Cyanide. William Morrow. ISBN   9780062074386.
  4. Maurice Richardson (13 January 1946). "Review". The Observer. p. 3.
  5. "Review". Toronto Daily Star. 24 February 1945. p. 16.
  6. Barnard, Robert (1990). A Talent to Deceive – an appreciation of Agatha Christie (Revised ed.). Fontana Books. p. 205. ISBN   0-00-637474-3.
  7. "Sparkling Cyanide (1983 TV Movie) Full Cast & Crew". IMDb. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  8. Holdings at the British Library (Newspapers – Colindale). Shelfmark: NPL LON LD3 and NPL LON MLD3.