
In Conversation: An OUP Podcast Gill Plain, "Agatha Christie: A Very Short Introduction" (Oxford UP, 2025)
Aug 22, 2025
Gill Plain, Professor of English at the University of St Andrews, dives into the multifaceted world of Agatha Christie. She uncovers the complexities of Christie's narrative style and her societal critiques through beloved characters like Poirot and Miss Marple. Discussion spans Christie's indifference to adaptations, focusing on preserving her story's integrity, and how wartime changes influenced 'And Then There Were None.' Plain highlights Christie's ability to resonate across cultures, cementing her as a timeless literary icon.
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Why The 'Closed' Setting Matters
- Clue-puzzle fiction requires a corpse and a contained community of suspects for the puzzle to work.
- The outsider detective unpicks hidden motives within that closed social setting.
Outsiders Are Ideal Detectives
- Outsider detectives are trusted investigators who avoid implication in local lies and secrets.
- Poirot's foreignness and Miss Marple's underestimated age let them reveal truths the community cannot.
Chandler's Dismissal vs. Christie's Hard Edge
- Raymond Chandler dismissed Christie as 'boring' while promoting gritty realism.
- Plain argues Christie's worlds are equally hard-bitten, full of venom and moral indifference.

