A Murder Is Announced (Miss Marple, #5) by Agatha Christie | Goodreads
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Miss Marple #5

A Murder Is Announced

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"A Murder is Announced" is a staple of crime fiction and often considered as the best Miss Marple novel. The villagers of Chipping Cleghorn, including Jane Marple who is staying nearby, are agog with curiosity over an advertisement in the local gazette which reads: ‘A murder is announced and will take place on Friday October 29th, at Little Paddocks at 6.30 p.m.’ Is this a childish practical joke? Or a hoax intended to scare poor Letitia Blacklock? Unable to resist the mysterious invitation, a crowd gathers at Little Paddocks at the appointed time when, without warning, the lights go out…

The novel was promoted on both sides of the Atlantic as Agatha Christie's 50th book and published in 1950 by William Collins.

Librarian's note: this entry is for the novel, "A Murder is Announced." Collections and other Miss Marple stories are located elsewhere on Goodreads. The series includes 12 novels and 20 short stories. Entries for the short stories can be found by searching Goodreads for: "a Miss Marple Short Story."

288 pages, Hardcover

First published June 1, 1950

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About the author

Agatha Christie

4,106 books65.3k followers
Agatha Christie also wrote romance novels under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott, and was occasionally published under the name Agatha Christie Mallowan.

Dame Agatha Mary Clarissa Christie, Lady Mallowan, DBE (née Miller) was an English writer known for her 66 detective novels and 14 short story collections, particularly those revolving around fictional detectives Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. She also wrote the world's longest-running play, the murder mystery The Mousetrap, which has been performed in the West End of London since 1952. A writer during the "Golden Age of Detective Fiction", Christie has been called the "Queen of Crime". She also wrote six novels under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott. In 1971, she was made a Dame (DBE) by Queen Elizabeth II for her contributions to literature. Guinness World Records lists Christie as the best-selling fiction writer of all time, her novels having sold more than two billion copies.

This best-selling author of all time wrote 66 crime novels and story collections, fourteen plays, and six novels under a pseudonym in romance. Her books sold more than a billion copies in the English language and a billion in translation. According to Index Translationum, people translated her works into 103 languages at least, the most for an individual author. Of the most enduring figures in crime literature, she created Hercule Poirot and Miss Jane Marple. She atuhored The Mousetrap, the longest-running play in the history of modern theater.

Associated Names:
Agata Christie
Agata Kristi
Агата Кристи (Russian)
Агата Крісті (Ukrainian)
Αγκάθα Κρίστι (Greek)
アガサ クリスティ (Japanese)
阿嘉莎·克莉絲蒂 (Chinese)

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5 stars
22,005 (30%)
4 stars
31,724 (43%)
3 stars
15,945 (22%)
2 stars
2,155 (2%)
1 star
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 4,543 reviews
Profile Image for Madeline.
779 reviews47.8k followers
July 9, 2010
By this point, I have given up trying to play Guess The Culprit with Agatha Christie mysteries. It's just not possible. She's like a magician who tells an audience that she's going to make a coin disappear and reappear. The coin disappears, and she tells you to watch her right hand. You, who have seen magic shows before, think "Aha! Misdirection! I'll watch her left hand, and then I'll see how the trick is done." So you're watching her left hand, and everyone else is watching her right hand, and then suddenly the coin appears out of nowhere and no one has any idea how she did that. Meanwhile the assistant, who you've completely forgotten about, has just transformed into a dog and then your brain explodes.

That's what reading a good Agatha Christie book is like. This is one of the good ones. My favorite Christie stories are the ones where multiple people get murdered. A murder occurs, people start looking for the killer, and then BAM somebody else is found dead and you realize that whoever the killer is he/she is fucking nuts and you don't know who's going to die next. It adds a great deal of tension and urgency to the story, and I love it.

Now I have two complaints, one serious and one absurd, that contributed to this book's four-instead-of-five star rating.

The serious: Miss Marple is more present in this book than she was in The Body in the Library, but she still keeps to the sidelines a lot and it's frustrating. She's not even mentioned by name until page 95, and I think it'd be nice if she could solve a mystery on her own instead of waiting for the police to invite her into their Boys Only Mystery Solving Clubhouse.

The absurd: Quotes like this, when the police are discussing the inhabitants of the village where the murder took place: "'Nice old pussies and retired colonels. ...Lord, I wish I had my own particular old pussy here. Wouldn't she like to get her nice ladylike teeth into this?'
'Who's your own particular pussy, Henry? An aunt?'"

Okay. I understand that Agatha Christie's definition of "pussy" is vastly different from my own. But this is like that part in Arrested Development where they actually got a character to call someone a pussy without it being censored, because they claimed it was a British term for a nice person. We all know what they're really doing, and that's delighting in being able to use that word freely on TV. (Speaking of Arrested Development, you should all be proud of me for resisting the urge to toss out an "It's an illusion!" reference during that magician analogy I made up there. You're welcome.)

Once would be understandable, and a sign that my dirty mind has gone too far, but then it happens again: "'Ye gods and little fishes,' said Sir Henry, 'can it be? George, it's my own particular, one and only, four-starred pussy. The super pussy of all old pussies.'"

Oh come on, Christie. Now you're just messing with me.
"
Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,564 reviews101 followers
October 21, 2021
A Murder is Announced (Miss Marple #5), first published in the UK by the Collins Crim Club in June 1950.

Characters: Miss Jane Marple, the Inspector and vicar's wife Bunch, Swiss hotel clerk Rudi, Miss Letitia Blackstone houses scatty Dora, Cousins Julia and Patrick, gardener widow Phillipa, and paranoid cook Mitzi.

Abstract: Villagers expect a fun game after a Gazette announcement of murder, but when lights flash off, shots ring out, and a masked burglar falls dead, the Inspector and vicar's wife Bunch call in expert Miss Jane Marple. Was Swiss hotel clerk Rudi framed? Miss Letitia Blackstone houses scatty Dora, cousins Julia and Patrick, gardener widow Phillipa, and paranoid cook Mitzi.

عنوانهاس چاپ شده در ایران: «اعلام یک قتل»، «پنجمین کتاب از ماجراهای دوشیزه مارپل»، «قطار ساعت چهار و پنجاه دقیقه از پدینگتون و اعلام یک قتل»؛ نویسنده آگاتا کریستی؛ تاریخ نخستین خوانش روز بیست و ششم ماه نوامبر سال2009میلادی

عنوان: اعلام یک قتل، پنجمین کتاب از ماجراهای دوشیزه مارپل، نویسنده: آگاتا کریستی؛ مترجم: محمدعلی ایزدی، نشر: کتاب‌های کارآگاه (وابسته به انتشارات هرمس)، چاپ دوم، در سال1388، ادبیات پلیسی و جنایی در362صفحه؛ شابک9789643634100؛ موضوع داستانهای نویسندگان بریتانیا - سده 20م

عنوان: قطار ساعت چهار و پنجاه دقیقه از پدینگتون و اعلام یک قتل؛ نویسنده: آگاتا کریستی؛ مترجم: محمدعلی ایزدی، تهران، هرمس، سال 1388؛ در720ص؛ شابک9789643636203؛

چکیده: در روزنامه ی محلی روستایی کوچک، قتلی در خانه ی زنی به نام «لتیشا بلک‌ لاک» اعلام می‌شود؛ در ساعت مقرر، و در حالیکه تعدادی از اهالی روستا، در محل گفته شده، حاضر هستند، ناگهان برق ساختمان قطع می‌شود، و مردی با چراغ‌ قوه، در ورودی اتاق، ظاهر می‌شود؛ پس از شنیده شدن صدای چند گلوله، هنگامی که برق مجدداً وصل می‌شود، حضار با جسد فرد چراغ به دست، و اسلحه‌ ای در کنار وی، مواجه می‌شوند؛ پلیس برای یافتن راز قتل، از «دوشیزه مارپل»، یاری می‌گیرد؛ در این بین شخصی دیگر از مدعوین، و نیز دوست و هم‌خانه خانم «بلک‌ لاک» نیز، به قتل می‌رسند؛ و ...؛

تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 18/08/1399هجری خورشیدی؛ 28/07/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی
Profile Image for Melindam.
728 reviews347 followers
April 21, 2024
I prefer Poirot-novels to Marple ones, but this book has always been in the Top 5 on my Agatha Christie favourites list.

This time I actually put myself the question "why".
It is NOT because of the investigation or the solution of the crime, even though it is very well done in the classic Agatha Christie style: red herrings are there to lead you astray; real clues are hidden in plain sight and yet elude you completely.

The answer is characterization, which is perfect: concise and revealing. Dame Agatha depicts her characters without mercy (everyone has motive/potential/opportunity to commit murder) and yet with humour & a deep understanding (people are the same everywhere: we are all human with faults and foibles).

This insight into characters as well as the milieu they are placed in reminds me a bit of Jane Austen and what she wrote to her niece Anna on writing novels: “3 or 4 Families in a Country village is the very thing to work on”. Also a quote from Elizabeth Bennet comes to mind: “Follies and nonsense, whims and inconsistencies do divert me, I own, and I laugh at them whenever I can.” So this mixture of Jane Austen & Agatha Christie which delights me in this particular novel.
Profile Image for James.
Author 20 books3,988 followers
January 12, 2018
So... a murder is listed in a newspaper... foretelling it will happen at a certain date and time. Is it possible? Yes. Does it happen? You'll just have to read it. Christie at her best... love her stories. love the concept. Well-written. I'm on a kick to go back and read all the Poirot's and Marple's this year! The best part about this one is the murder takes forever to happen... and you wonder what the real mystery is for so long. I can imagine watching the clock waiting but not knowing what to do. Very inside one's head to figure this one out!

About Me
For those new to me or my reviews... here's the scoop: I read A LOT. I write A LOT. And now I blog A LOT. First the book review goes on Goodreads, and then I send it on over to my WordPress blog at https://thisismytruthnow.com, where you'll also find TV & Film reviews, the revealing and introspective 365 Daily Challenge and lots of blogging about places I've visited all over the world. And you can find all my social media profiles to get the details on the who/what/when/where and my pictures. Leave a comment and let me know what you think. Vote in the poll and ratings. Thanks for stopping by. Note: All written content is my original creation and copyrighted to me, but the graphics and images were linked from other sites and belong to them. Many thanks to their original creators.
Profile Image for Yun.
547 reviews27k followers
October 7, 2019
In A Murder Is Announced, a notice appears in the local papers stating the time and location of a murder. The neighbors, thinking it was all great fun, show up en masse. When a murder actually happens and it becomes clear this is no game, fear quickly takes over. In steps old, fussy, adorable Mrs. Marple, with her astute observations and keen awareness of human nature.

This story is so fun and quintessentially Agatha Christie--a locked room mystery, a handful of suspects, and plenty of red herrings and secrets everywhere. And when it's all explained in the end, it's just so damn satisfying to have everything tie up in a logical manner. I had an inkling of the guilty party this time, though not the underlying motives, but that didn't diminish my enjoyment of this book.

I first started reading Agatha Christie in 8th grade. Over the last few years, I've been embarking on a (slow) reread of her books with the goal of getting through them all. This is one of her personal favorites, so I had high expectations going in. And once again, as always, she doesn't let me down!
Profile Image for Matheus Madeira.
11 reviews577 followers
January 6, 2022
será que algum dia eu não serei feito de otário? como pode em gata triste meu deus
Profile Image for carol..
1,627 reviews8,864 followers
December 14, 2014

Taken from my blog post: https://clsiewert.wordpress.com/2014/...

I grew up on Christie. At the time, I was limited to whatever my local library branch physically had on the shelves, so it took awhile to work my way through her bibliography, and even now, I’m not sure I’ve read all of her books. There was that pesky problem of British and American editions with separate titles, leaving me hopelessly confused about what I’ve read. Thankfully, A Murder is Announced had the same title in both editions, which might be why I remember it so well. It might also be because it is an amazingly well written with a nicely tricky mystery.

Oh, Letty! A murder has been announced in the personals section of the local gazette. You kids may not know this, but that’s like Craigslist in print form. And game murder mysteries were old-fashioned acted-out parties where guests solved the mystery. That’s why the residents of the village of Chipping Cleghorn assume they are being invited. Nonetheless, a newspaper invite bit informal, so they contrive excuses to drop by Letitia Blacklock’s home. As they’re settled in, having a smoke and a sherry, a masked man holds them up. The lights go out. Shots echo in the dark room. When someone flips a light, the unknown masked intruder is dead. The police are prone to write it off as a burglary gone bad, except Inspector Craddock can’t quite let it go. His godfather points him in the direction of the little old ladies of the case, citing his own Miss Marple as an example. Before long, we meet her in person.

Christie is in peak form here, displaying skill in every aspect of writing, balanced with atmosphere, character, mystery and philosophy, with not an excess word present. Oh sure, had Christie Sandersonized it, it could have been far beyond its 300 pages, filled with details about the village foliage or the design of their dresses. Except those details are there, and rarely does she tell us; we discover it in clever word choice or implicit in dialogue. This may be why A Murder is Announced is one of her better mysteries; though she provides a number of clues and red herrings, her details are so sparse that careful reading is needed. Come to think of it, Sanderson presents a symphony in a book, while Christie is the soloist, the violin virtuoso, each note given star attention.

Clues are dropped. I wish I could give an opinion on the mystery, but the truth is, I’ve read this enough times that I remembered the solution, just not the reasoning. Still, astute minds in the Goodreads Agatha Christie Lovers group pointed out Dame Agatha was dropping subtle clues from the beginning, along with plenty of red herrings.

Characterization is amazing. Scant descriptors, and yet every utterance hints at character. Check this brief oratory by an elderly gardener when being questioned:

“‘I’ve no idea,’ said Craddock. ‘I suppose this hold-up caused a lot of talk?’

“That it did. What’s us coming to? That’s what Ned Barker said. Comes of going to the pictures so much, he said. But Tom Riley, he says it comes of letting these furriners run about loose. And depend on it, he says, that girl that cooks up there for Miss Blacklock and ‘as such a nasty temper–she’s in it, he said. She’s a Communist or worse, he says, and we don’t like that sort ‘ere.’“

All he does is talk, and with every sentence, Christie gives us the picture of the small town, the gossip, the dynamic between the young and the old, the long-time residents and the foreigners–or furriners, as he says. And so much about the man himself–what he chooses to share with police, his education, his speech pattern, his peer group. Clever, clever.

The sly humor is a nice touch for an adult read–I’m not sure I picked up on it when I was younger.

“‘And it isn’t,’ pursued Mrs. Swettenham, ‘as though you were a worker. You don’t do any work at all.’
‘That’s not in the least true,’ said Edmund indignantly. ‘I’m writing a book.’
‘I meant real work,’ said Mrs. Swettenham.“

But I have no doubt that it was a great deal of work indeed, to craft a book that provides excellent entertainment, and yet such insight into the residents of a small English town. An enjoyable trip down memory lane that gives me all new appreciation for her skill.
Profile Image for Anne.
4,240 reviews70k followers
February 18, 2024
I FIGURED IT OUT!
Yess. I finally got one right!

description

Ok, the gist is that there is an advertisement in the local paper to come to Letitia Blacklock's house for a Murder that evening. Of course, they all suppose that it's one of those Murder Parties where they play as victims and detectives.
So when a stranger shows up threatening to rob them and the lights go out? Well, no one is prepared to find the would-be robber dead and Letitia grazed by a bullet!
Now the hunt is one to discover who wants Letitia dead, and (of course) not everyone in this sleepy village is who they are pretending to be!

description

This was ok. It's not my favorite, but I did like Bunny quite a bit. And that's the thing with Miss Marple, she spends a lot of time lurking in the background of her own detective stories, so you sort of have to glom on to one of the other characters. And other than Bunny (who admittedly wasn't in it much) there just weren't a load of fantastic personalities to attach yourself to.
But hey, I got one right!
I. Am. A. Genius.

description

As far as the audio goes, I like Joan Hickson as a narrator but I felt like I could hear her breathing a bit too much in this one. I kept hearing her snuffing in after every sentence and it was a tad distracting. I know, this sounds really awful, but it was like she was too close to the mic while she was recording or something.

Publisher: HarperAudio
Edition: Unabridged
Joan Hickson - Narrator
Profile Image for megs_bookrack.
1,787 reviews12k followers
March 24, 2024
**4.5-stars rounded up**

As some of you may know, one of my 2023-Reading Goals is to read all of the full-length novels in the Miss Marple series in order.

A Murder is Announced is the third novel in the series and generally considered one of the best. I had been greatly anticipating this one and had so much fun with it.



Christie's stories are complete nostalgia for me. They're comfort reads and this one, the classic set-up, it felt completely her.

This one is set in the village of Chipping Cleghorn and follows the events that occur after the local Gazette runs an advertisement stating, A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th, at Little Paddocks at 6.30 p.m.



No one knows what it means, but the village is a titter about it. Many locals decide there is only one way to find out, thus arriving at the stated destination at the appointed time.

As they gather in the residence, without warning the lights are extinguished and a gun is fired. As the lights come back on, a gruesome scene awaits them.

Who is the victim? Who is the killer and why?



As with the previous novels, Miss Marple wasn't in the house at the time of the crime, but gets consulted after due to her expertise in such affairs.

This had a big cast of quirky characters and it was fun trying to work out all the connections and varied relationships. There is also talk of an inheritance of sorts and I always love that trope.

I wasn't necessarily trying to figure out the whodunit whilst reading this, but I will say, the reveal did surprise me. I feel like Christie succeeded in pulling the wool over my eyes; a misdirection, if you will.



Overall, I loved it. It was such a great mystery, with intriguing twists that did ultimately surprise me.

Also, I feel like we got more face time with Miss Marple in this one and she was in more danger than ever before. It was tense and intriguing. Well done!

Profile Image for Gabriel.
526 reviews922 followers
May 23, 2023
¿Es esta una de las mejores novelas que ha escrito Agatha Christie? Para mí lo es, sin duda alguna.

4.5🌟

En un periódico local de Chipping Cleghorn aparece un aviso donde dice que el viernes 29 de octubre se cometerá un asesinato en Little paddocks, hogar de Letitia Blacklock. Para un pueblito como ese, dicho acontecimiento representa una de las cosas más interesantes que pueden pasar en mucho tiempo, por lo que para los distintos vecinos y habitantes que han leído el anuncio esto les parece un juego de lo más divertido al que piensan asistir totalmente ingenuos y ajenos a lo que pasará, sin embargo, para la dueña y señora de la casa es una broma pesada y de mal gusto.

Se anuncia un asesinato es un caso que no es tramposo, tiene múltiples sospechosos, es tensionante y adictivo, tiene humor inteligente y sardónico a la vez que mantiene algo de seriedad, de esas historias que te mantienen pegado a la pantalla y haciendo teorías para buscar al culpable aunque muchas de esas hipótesis terminen siendo derrumbadas como un castillo de naipes mientras te hacen dudar de todos.

Y lo mejor de todo es que aunque al principio me ha parecido obvio porque hay varias novelas de Christie que me han dejado el trauma (no las menciono porque seguro entienden la referencia y les hace spoiler si las han leído) en esta novela su fortaleza está en que Christie ha sabido hacer que la mayoría parezcan culpables y tengan razones y motivos de peso que los puedan señalar como sospechosos directos.

Gracias por regalarme este caso querida Agatha Christie, de tus mejores libros. Una historia bien construida e hilada, con sospechosos por doquier y donde me viste la cara de tonto pero aunque me frustra me encanta y me satisface. Humor, seriedad, tensión, expectativa, encubrimientos, suplantación, varios asesinatos, pistas falsas, sospechosos por todos lados y con razones e hipótesis igual de válidas, algunas teorías fuertes y otras blandengues.

Lo tiene todo para ser de sus mejores y de mis favoritos.
Profile Image for Susan.
2,802 reviews585 followers
April 1, 2017
Published in 1950, this is one of my favourite Miss Marple mysteries. It is set in the small village of Chipping Cleghorn, which is not unlike St Mary Mead, with its cast of local characters and, of course, a local newspaper – which is delivered every Friday. On Friday, October 29th, the paper is perused by the villagers, who discover an odd message in the Personal column: “A Murder is Announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th at Little Paddocks at 6:30pm. Friends please accept this the only intimation.”

Of course, Miss Letitia Blacklock, of Little Paddocks, who lives with her old friend, Dora Bunner, young cousins Patrick and Julia, war widow Philippa Haymes and a volatile European refugee cook, named Mitzi, has no choice but to act as hostess to the gathering of local villagers who ‘drop by’ to see what will happen. What actually does happen is murder, when a young man holds up the room at the appointed time, and the stage is set for a wonderfully convoluted plot, involving the will of a wealthy financial, a great cast of possible suspects and some romance.

The crime is investigated by Detective Inspector Dermot Craddock, who turns out to be the godson of Sir Henry Clithering, the ex-commissioner of Scotland Yard, who is a great believer in the powers of Miss Marple. Sir Henry is delighted when she turns out to be staying at the very hotel where the young man, who incongruously appeared at Little Paddocks, worked. By chance, she knows Bunch Harmon, one of the locals who turned up at Miss Blacklock’s, so she immediately re-locates to Chipping Cleghorn, in order to aid the investigation.

One of the most notable things about this mystery is not only the classic Christie setting, and characters, but the fact that the author makes much use of the changing world after WWII. Whereas before, Miss Marple bemoans, you knew who everybody was and where they came from, now people are displaced, move away and you take them at face value. With people bringing back guns from their time in the army as souvenirs, not locking doors and allowing neighbours access to their homes and having to accept people are who they say they are, this allows Christie freedom to really enjoy herself with red herrings, identities and clues. A thoroughly enjoyable mystery, with Miss Marple highly involved in the action.
Profile Image for Adrian.
601 reviews229 followers
April 2, 2017
Review to follow when I can get to my laptop :)

Right I now have access to a proper keyboard, so I can write my review. Now this book to me was heading for 5 stars, until one particular incident .
That apart it was an excellent mystery with Miss Marple on fine form. Although it wasn't set in St Mary Mead, it was set in Chipping Leghorn which is inhabited by similar people with similar characteristics and lives.
For once I did latch onto a couple of clues along the way, so the denouement was not a complete surprise, although I did have vague memories of the Joan Hickson TV episode.
All in all thoroughly enjoyable, and I look forward to the next book in the series
Profile Image for Carol She's So Novel ꧁꧂ .
854 reviews741 followers
May 8, 2017
3.5★

I seem to be out of synch with most of Christie's other fans, as, in spite of the very original scene setting beginning, I don't consider this one of The Divine Christie's better works.

Other than the beginning, the other pluses were some great dialogue, learning more about life in wartime Britain. and the unintentionally hilarious mentions of old pussies!

"Ye Gods and Little Fishes," said Sir Henry, "can it be? George, it's my own particular, one and only four starred Pussy. The super Pussy of all old Pussies..."


Ok, I know I'm being childish! :D

But every character was so dismissive of foreign refugee Mitzi's suffering. And coincidence was stretched a bit far with

Still a good escapist bit of writing - just don't go in with big expectations!
Profile Image for Hamad.
1,118 reviews1,499 followers
September 8, 2019
This Review ✍️ Blog 📖 Twitter 🐦 Instagram 📷

“Of course, if you’ve made up your mind about it, you’ll find an answer to everything.”

🌟 Agatha’s book are my escape into the crime world when I want something I am pretty sure I will like! This is my second book in the Miss Marple series and I definitely liked it more than the first but I think I am a bigger fan of Poirot as he is more involved in the crime usually!

🌟 The idea of this book is that a murder is announced in the local newspaper and people start getting curious of what is this about and they gather at the announced location, only for the murder to happen for real! The rest of the book is an investigation of how things happened and was it intentional or not. Agatha’s ability to write full novels in few pages still blows my mind every time!

🌟 The writing is one of my favorites. Agatha has that magical writing that makes you intrigued and thinking to the last moment. As usual most of the characters are introduced quickly in the first chapters but then we get to know them all at the subsequent chapters and you will end up feeling for them for sure! No one understand human psychology as Agatha did! Miss Marple reminds me of my Grandma, a very smart and cunning woman that you do not want to miss with so that makes her get a special place in my heart now!

🌟 I thought I was smart this time when halfway through the book I made a connection and thought I got it sorted out, only to be surprised later that one of the characters mentions that and the detective don’t buy it for reasons that are explained later! And as always everything makes sense at the end and you as a reader will feel a bit silly for missing all the hints!

🌟 Summary: I don’t need to talk much about Agatha as she is well known and if you have not read any of her books then what are you waiting for?! The lady was a genius and I do want to read all of her 80 books. The fact that this one was written in 1950 makes the experience more amazing too!

you can get the book from here: Book Depository
Profile Image for Sandeep.
88 reviews68 followers
October 22, 2019
"A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th, at Little Paddocks, at 6:30 p.m. Friends accept this, the only intimation.”

This was exactly what an advertisement read in the local newspaper of Chipping Cleghorn on the morning of October 29th. The residents of Chipping Cleghorn, once having read this announcement, think that this must be a “murder game” played at a party or a sick joke.
The residents begin to arrive and at exactly 6:30, the lights are turned off. A person with a torch enters and three shots are fired. When the lights are turned on, a dead guy with a mask is lying on the floor with a revolver on his side. Did he commit suicide? Or someone shot him?

The story doesn't lack in interesting characters and several plot twists. The writing style is really impressive and easy to read although there are too many characters to wrap your head around. It's a cozy slow-paced build up that just has enough to grab hold the reader's attention and keep them turning those pages.

Since this book is a part of Miss Marple series, I was expecting to see more of her. I was a little disappointed because she was not really mentioned until Chapter 8 (maybe it’s supposed to be like that.) but I can say that I enjoyed her way of “investigating”.

I loved the ending but I was hoping that the “suspect” will tell his/her side of the story. I think it’d be more interesting to know his/her own reasons instead of Miss Marple and Inspector Craddock connecting all the clues. Also, I was quite shocked when I read the word “Pussies” (like “The super Pussy of all old Pussies.”) but then, this novel was originally published in 1950 where the definition of this word is totally different from what we know today.

A Murder is Announced shows us how powerful money is and how it can change a person. I would recommend this book to everyone but not as an introduction to Christie's works. I think she has written far better books than this.
Profile Image for Jeraviz.
960 reviews547 followers
May 12, 2023
Comienza con una premisa muy atractiva: en el periódico local se anuncia que se va a cometer un asesinato en un día y hora señalados. Y lo mejor es que las personas más relevantes del pueblo acuden a esa cita para ver qué ocurre. Un ejemplo perfecto del refrán de la curiosidad mató al gato.

Para resolver el misterio aparece Miss Marple y a través de interrogatorios vamos conociendo a todo el elenco de personajes que se dieron cita en ese momento. Es un libro entretenido, con una trama ingeniosa pero que su resolución creo que está algo forzada. Hay información que se oculta hasta el último momento por lo que no tienes esa revelación que a veces ocurre de darte cuenta que tenías las pistas delante de tus narices y no has conseguido verlo.

Por otra parte, creo que, como personaje, Miss Marple no tiene tanto tirón como Hercules Poirot y no he conectado tanto. Es el primer libro que leo de Marple así que tampoco puedo decir mucho más pero tengo tan idealizado a Poirot ya que desde pequeño leía sus historias que eso tal vez me haya afectado al leer a Marple.

Pero en resumen, una historia más tremendamente ingeniosa de Christie.
Profile Image for Chris Lee .
175 reviews125 followers
December 11, 2023
This book opens with the following message: 'A murder is announced and will take place on Friday October 29th at Little Paddocks at 6.30pm. Friends, please accept this, the only intimation.' Would you be curious enough to accept the invitation to this party that ends with a literal bang? I sure would. In fact, maybe I should pin this invitation to the community activity board during Halloween next year. Muhaha. 😁

The aforementioned message is published in the local Gazette and read by the townsfolk in Chipping Cleghorn. Most of them plan on showing up at Little Paddocks around 6:30 to ‘chew up the scenery.’ Little do they know, the hostess, Miss Blacklock, has no idea that her home was selected for the dastardly deed. When the curious audience arrives, the lights are turned off, shots are fired, and someone is left pushing up daisies. Exit stage right.

I thought this whodunit was grand! We have so many exciting avenues to follow, an incredible number of red herrings to sift through, and a multitude of clever, seemingly innocuous characters to rule out. Detective Craddock puts on his thinking cap and mulls over clues such as oiled door hinges, disorganized chrysanthemums, a mystifying family tree, electrical faults, and lies. Oh! The lies are plenty, and they will keep you guessing until the end.

This is my very first Marple book, and coming from the world of Hercule Poirot, I thought the character was going to be officious for some reason. I was pleasantly surprised to find out this was so far from the truth. She’s sly, funny, and introspective. I was jumping for joy each time she popped into the story.

The ending is just incredible!! I did not see it coming from a country mile. This is required reading for all sleuth lovers.

Fave quotes:

|| "People with a grudge against the world are always dangerous. They seem to think life owes them something."

|| "Of course, if you’ve made up your mind about it, you’ll find an answer to everything. "

|| "I do really believe that, like so many liars, there is a real substratum of truth behind her lies."

A big thank you to Helga for the recommendation and for the read along. It was great offering up some of my theories that were incredibly off the mark. 😁

🎵| Soundtrack |🎵
❖ Rush – Fly by Night
❖ Brika – Options
❖ Ed Sheeran – Take Me Back to London (feat. Stormzy) *I feel like Marple would be fly enough to listen to this. 😎
❖ Unleash The Archers – The Wind That Shapes The Land

⭐ | Rating | ⭐
❖ 4.5 out of 5 ❖
Profile Image for Rosh.
1,800 reviews2,713 followers
October 27, 2022
Finally a Marple mystery that worked for me…. somewhat!

I can safely say that this is the best Marple story I have read (which isn’t saying much, considering that I have read exactly two full-length novels and three short stories featuring the iconic character.) By now, I have attuned myself to the format and was hence prepared for the huge infodump in the final 20%. (Not that I liked it; I tolerated it.)

What clicked for me:
😍 Miss Marple doesn’t just make an appearance a lot earlier (around the 30% mark) but also gets an active role in the proceedings. I finally feel like I know the character to some extent.

😍 There are several complicated but memorable characters. They might not be layered (possible because there are too many of them to go in depth about) but the variety of persons adds to the interest factor. Mitzi the cook was my favourite of the lot, followed by Bunch the parson’s wife.

😍 The resolution of the mystery isn’t entirely dependent on the “detective” Miss Marple but is resolved in bits and pieces by many characters.

😍 There are plenty of red herrings, but also an equal number of intelligent clues scattered throughout the narrative that are all helpful in guessing the culprit. As such, the resolution doesn’t spring out of nowhere (like it did in the other Marple stories) but comes logically from the plot. The intricacy of the planning is such that what I had assumed to be typos also turned out to be clues. Quite intelligent plot structuring!

😍 It seems fairly fast-paced. (I say “seems” because I didn’t get to test this hypothesis due to my adamant brain’s refusal to cooperate for an enthusiastic reading of the book.)


What didn’t work for me:
😔 The book hasn’t aged well. There are plenty of xenophobic & racist references. I know the book is a product of its times, but when the number of such allusions goes beyond an acceptable minimum, it becomes tougher and tougher to ignore. Of course, I am not docking stars for this, because a book ought to be judged as per the era it was written in rather than the year it was read in. But these elements were still a downer for me.

😔 I have no idea why, but I kept zoning out of the narration after every few paragraphs. This could partly be blamed on my dislike for this genre. It could also be because there was a lot of blah-blah-blah in the first half. The second half is where the narration starts picking up its stride. Until the 70% mark or so, my intrigue was at a minimal level and I could keep the book aside more easily than I could pick it up.

😔 Infodump at the climax, as in every single mystery. The “big reveal” starts from the 80% point and goes almost till the end.

😔 A couple of character actions didn’t make sense, but if they were to make sense, there would have been no mystery. Oh well!


This above-average experience doesn’t change my mind about the Miss Marple series, which I now feel isn’t for me. I will still complete the Marple anthology I have going on, but thereafter, I shall bid adieu to this character. Maybe I will have better luck with Poirot. Fingers crossed. It sucks not to be able to connect with the works of an author that the whole world except you seems to adore.

3.5 stars, rounding up because I can honestly say to the book: “It’s not you; it’s me.”




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Profile Image for Helga.
1,082 reviews234 followers
December 12, 2023
* My second time reading.

It’s a fine murdering day,
And as balmy as May
And the sleuths from the village are gone.
And we’ll all go a’murdering today!


A murder is announced in the local newspaper of the village of Chipping Cleghorn. According to the advertisement, it is going to be committed at 6:30 in the evening at Little Paddocks, a house owned by Letty Blacklock, an elderly lady who lives with her companion and her distant cousins.

Is it someone’s idea of a joke? Is it just some silly idiot trying to be funny? Is it a murder game? Is it a hoax? Who is behind the announcement? Is any one going to be murdered? Surely if anyone wanted to murder someone, they wouldn’t advertise the fact in the paper, would they?

One thing is for sure. Half the village would go up to the house around 6:30, agog with curiosity.
Better prepare some snacks and bring out the sherry.

6:29 pm. Half the village have already arrived chatting about trivialities.
6:30 pm. The lights go out. A man enters the dark room with a powerful torch, shouting "Stick 'em up!". There is a commotion. Shots are heard.
6:31 pm. Someone is dead.

Somewhere- a killer…Where?

Someone is dead... and another... and another.
Enter my favorite, fluffy, cute aunty Marple…

Thank you Chris for reading this book with me. I had lots of fun discussing murder, mayhem and possible clues with you.


Profile Image for carlos carroll.
191 reviews367 followers
December 19, 2021
Últimamente descubro cada culpable en los libros de Agatha, en lo que fallo es en recolectar las pistas, básicamente lo que hago es descartar los sospechosos y ver quién es el más inocente.
Profile Image for Kelly.
889 reviews4,526 followers
July 4, 2020
Sometimes you just need a classic for a palate cleanser, to remind you that things can be well done. Exposition can be done while plot moves along. I can figure out what everyone is like from dialogue and actions. I can get atmosphere and setting from hints and judicious description (no one said a word about this being austerity Britain and no one had to- illegal butter trading said it all). I can feel like I know characters quickly and get into a mystery that I care about solving. Yeah. Sometimes you gotta get away from that “for fans of” nonsense and go back to the real thing. Well done, excellent package of a thing from top to bottom.
Profile Image for Ms. Smartarse.
630 reviews314 followers
April 15, 2023
The local gazette of Chipping Cleghorn announces a murder at 6:30 p.m. at the home of the very respectable Ms. Leticia Blacklock. While most people take it as a bit of good (possibly rude) bit of fun, no one was expecting the assailant to be the one to actually lose his life... or anyone else, really.

As the participants are all busy assuring the police that they knew nothing about nobody, they manage to simultaneously remember the most bizarre details. Though none of them have any doubts about it being a suicide. Intrepid inspector Dermot Haddock however, suspects foul play.

police questioning

For a murder-mystery touted as possibly the best of Dame Agatha Christie, it took me quite a while to warm up to. It has a truckload of characters to keep track of: Leticia Blacklock, the assailant, her companion, her nephew and niece, a lodger, 6 neighbours, the vicar's somewhat ditzy wife, assorted hotel staff, the investigating team, a long-dead billionaire with his currently-dying wife, and Ms. Marple, in all her delightfully polite and apologetic investigative capacity. So the initial murder left me almost as confused as Ms. Blacklock's poor companion, although significantly less impressed. Then again, I wasn't there...

To be fair, the whole setup, reasoning, cheating, betrayal, and whatnot are all very cleverly done. And I thoroughly enjoyed following every one of Ms. Marple's threads of logic. Especially, when it was clear how much she loved providing the detective with her insights, but would very politely maintain an air of "I really shouldn't stick my nose into this".

Ms. Marple considering a theory

There were of course individual characters that I've loved from the get go: such as the subtly supercilious niece, the vicar's apparently-ditzy-but-actually-clever wife, and the ailing Mrs. Goedler during her lucid moments.

On the whole however, I found so many characters where annoying, especially as some of them had a tendency to just chatter on and on, that I ended up tuning them out, or attributing their slip-of-the-tongue to a typo. Multiple times. Which is where I missed several clues.

Score: 3.3/5 stars

I wasn't too keen on the omniscient POV, here. It just threw a whole lot of things at me at once.
And I couldn't shake the feeling , that all those ladies who lived together weren't doing so... ugh... platonically. I'd say I read too much smut these days, but the 2005 TV series confirms at least one of these pairings.

All in all, a very well construed mystery, but the character development could've used a bit more thought.

==============================================
Review of Murder at the Vicarage
Review of The Thirteen Problems
Review of The Body in the Library
Review of The Moving Finger
Profile Image for Luffy (Oda's Version).
757 reviews1,000 followers
March 5, 2016
Here is the book that made me guess the murderer for the first time ever. It's a classic and not a dime novel, and I'm glad for that. Other people too have guessed correctly and in hindsight I must say that the finale, with Miss Marple hiding and using her voice, is slightly artificial, clumsy and forced. Nevertheless most of the book is vintage Christie, and this book pushed me to read more and all of the Marpel stories. P.S Miss Murgatroyd and Hinchcliffe are "the L word".
Profile Image for Stephanie Anze.
657 reviews119 followers
April 4, 2018
"A murder is announced and will take place on Friday, October 29th, at Little Paddocks at 6:30 p.m. Friends please accept this, this only intimation."

Such is the ad that runs in the local gazette in the village of Chipping Cleghorn. Little Paddocks is the property owned by Miss Letitia Blacklock, a house she lives in with one of her dearest friends, two young cousins, her gardener and her cook. Everyone is shocked by the ad and denies having anything to with it. Still, Miss Blacklock feels compelled to host and on the set day and time neighbours simply "stop by casually". What everyone assumes is a party game takes a grim turn when a young man winds up dead. With many and differing accounts of the event, Miss Jane Marple is called upon to solve this mystery.

The last Miss Marple mystery I read was a bit of a letdown. This installment, however, is by far my favorite Marple to date. Published in 1950, a death occurs in Chipping Cleghorn a village not unlike St. Mary Mead. A strange ad is published in the local gazette luring all the neighbours to the house of Miss Letitia Blacklock. Not being able to contain their curiosity, the neighbours show up, the lights go out, a man enters the room, shots are fired and said man winds up dead. Emotions range from a great thrill to fear and the question lingers of wether the death was an accident or not. Enter Miss Marple. As Miss Marple gets to know the village and its inhabitants, she begins to piece together what actually happened that night. The red herrings in this plot were vast and varied and not one detail was left unchecked. I am not kidding, even a small detail as the placement of an object or the way a person was addressed played into this mystery. Without a doubt this is one of the best plots and characterizations done by Christie. The village and neighbours were both a source of comic relief and the force that moved the plot along.

I absolutely love the reveal. A few details I was able to figure out but as for the bulk of the mystery, it was a complete surprise to me. How everything tied in together, it was marvelously done. There is just one thing that bothered me with the book and that is the casual way in which the past of Mitzi, the Eastern European war refugee who is Miss Blacklock's cook, was overlooked. I do think Mitzi was depicted too harshly and her circumstances taken too lightly. Aside from that, this is as good as a book gets. Highly, highly recommended!
Profile Image for Piyangie.
542 reviews611 followers
November 8, 2021
At a time when my literary relationship with the queen of mystery is strained, A Murder is Announced comes my way to renew my interest and confidence in her yet again. This fourth installment of the Miss Marple series is quite interesting, and even if it is not one of her best, it was nevertheless cleverly written. The motive for the crime was based on one of her favourite recurring themes of monetary benefit. But, the overall story had originality in it.

In this murder-mystery, I see a different approach to writing by Agatha Christie. Rather than narrating the story in quite a grave and composed manner, she has dramatized it in such a way that it felt more like a play. I think the setting of the story in a small village with a closely knitted community where everybody knows everybody and everybody's gossip helped Christie to achieve this feat. And there was plenty of humour thrown in by Christie with some nearly comical characters.

Miss Marple was present from quite the beginning and plays an active and vital role in uncovering the criminal. This smart old lady untangles the clues that were even baffling to the police. I guessed the criminal right and so scored a point ahead of the police. But the whole puzzle, which seems clear to Miss Marple, baffled me equally. I'm happy to say that there, Christie was ahead of me. :)

I enjoyed the story, its authenticity, the dramatic quality, the humour, and the cleverness of Miss Marple. But, overall, I found it a bit too slow, and at times overwritten and repetitive. However, this book gave me hope and confidence to explore more works of our dear queen of crimes.
Profile Image for Vikas Singh.
Author 4 books308 followers
August 5, 2019
A Miss Marple story which has "delicious death" as its central plot. Once again Agatha Christie comes up with a superb plot for her 50th novel. The beginning i quite different from her other stories but intriguing. Though limited to a few characters, the reader is left guessing till the end who the murderer was. Delightful read
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