Diez negritos

Hardcover

Spanish language

Published June 25, 2007 by RBA Editores S.A. (Molino).

ISBN:
9788447354108

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (3 reviews)

Diez personas sin relación alguna entre sí son reunidas en un misterioso islote de la costa inglesa por un tal Mr. Owen, propietario de una lujosa mansión en el lugar a la par que un perfecto desconocido para todos sus invitados. Tras la primera cena, y sin haber conocido aún a su anfitrión, los diez comensales son acusados mediante una grabación de haber cometido un crimen. Uno por uno, a partir de ese momento, son asesinados sin explicación ni motivo aparente. Sólo una vieja canción infantil parece encerrar el misterio de una creciente pesadilla. Agatha Christie publicó esta brillante novela en 1939, superando una vez más las expectativas de sus más fieles seguidores. Con Diez negritos, la «Reina del Crimen» da nuevamente una vuelta de tuerca a su método: en esta ocasión, el detective no es otro que el lector, y será su propósito averiguar las claves de la intriga. …

45 editions

Still Interesting

3 stars

It's been a long time since I last read this book, and I remembered liking it. I don't think I caught all the ways in which the movie Clue either references it or uses it as a guide for their detective spoof before, and that was partially the reason for why I wanted to read it again.

I still very much like the idea that the point of the book is to target those who cannot be touched by the law or who haven't done something that can be considered "criminal." It really feels, particularly in an age where so many people in specific positions view themselves as untouchable because they're either "not doing something illegal" or the law refuses to do anything about them, like a concept we should be revisiting in our narrative fiction.

This novel is enough to bring me back to detective works, something which I've …

Still Interesting

3 stars

It's been a long time since I last read this book, and I remembered liking it. I don't think I caught all the ways in which the movie Clue either references it or uses it as a guide for their detective spoof before, and that was partially the reason for why I wanted to read it again.

I still very much like the idea that the point of the book is to target those who cannot be touched by the law or who haven't done something that can be considered "criminal." It really feels, particularly in an age where so many people in specific positions view themselves as untouchable because they're either "not doing something illegal" or the law refuses to do anything about them, like a concept we should be revisiting in our narrative fiction.

This novel is enough to bring me back to detective works, something which I've …

avatar for nachtvlucht

rated it

5 stars