Mystery Lover...but overall a very eclectic reader. Will read everything from the classics to historical fiction. Biography to essays. Not into horror or much into YA. If you would like me to review a book, then please see my stated review policy BEFORE emailing me. Please Note: This is a book blog. It is not a platform for advertising. Please do NOT contact me to ask that I promote your NON-book websites or products. Thank you.
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Wednesday, June 8, 2016
A Is for Arsenic: Mini-Review
She also gives a great deal of detail on Christie's extensive knowledge of poisons and medications which the author gained through her work as a nurse and apothecary's assistant during the First World War and as a dispenser at the University College Hospital during World War II. While, Christie did make some errors in her stories, she was correct most of the time with a high percentage of her scientific errors being due to a lack of information about the drugs at the time she wrote. And many doctors and critics of the time praised her for getting her details right.
The most tedious portions of this book were the sections within each chapter that gave all the scientific details of each poison--chemical makeup, how to distill it (if distilling is necessary), how many different compounds were related, all the gory details of how the poison acts on the human body (details about the copious vomiting, extreme muscle spasms, etc. that Dame Agatha spares her readers), etc. I was far more interested in the relationship between Christie's knowledge and her usage in the books and the connections between her fictional murders and any real-life murders that occurred either before her books were written (and which may have influenced her stories) or the murders that occurred after publication (and which some critics tried to say might not have happened if Christie hadn't highlighted such-and-such poison).
Overall, a thoroughly researched book that, for the most part, presents the subject matter in an engaging format. The scientific explanations, while a bit tedious to me, were not so technical that they went over my head and are written in language that the average reader should understand. It is particularly engaging for the Christie enthusiast who is looking for insight on her crimes. ★★ ★★
4 comments:
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This one has been on my TBR for ages. Will have to look up the library to see if I can get my paws on it :)
ReplyDeleteDoes she mention how medical professionals who were reading THE PALE HORSE recognized the symptoms of a certain type of poisoning and managed to save their patients? There are at least two well known cases in which that book helped save lives. I've always remembered that (both cases happened when I was in high school back in the 70s) and like to remind people of the good that can come out of the often maligned genre of murder mysteries.
ReplyDeleteJohn: yes, she does. She mentions the kudos that Christie got for that.
ReplyDeleteI read this one a long time ago and loved it. It's one of the few I have read of hers.
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