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Other editions of book Murder on the Orient Express

  • Murder On The Orient Express

    Agatha Christie

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Nov. 21, 2017)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. On a three-day journey through the snowbound Balkan hills, Hercule Poirot must weed through an array of international suspects to find the passenger who murdered a gangster on the Orient Express.
  • Murder On The Orient Express

    Agatha Christie

    Audio CD
    None
  • MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS, 1978

    AGATHA CHRISTIE

    Paperback (FONTANA/COLLINS, Oct. 1, 1978)
    famous book of Agatha Christie, one of the best
  • MURDER ON THE CALAIS COACH

    AGATHA CHRISTIE

    Mass Market Paperback (POCKET, Jan. 1, 1970)
    Classic British mystery by the venerable author, Agatha Christie. Paperback edition
  • Murder on the Orient Express

    Agatha Christie

    Paperback (Pocket, Sept. 3, 1980)
    Just after midnight, a snowdrift stopped the Orient Express in its tracks. The luxurious train was surprisingly full for the time of the year. But by the morning there was one passenger fewer. An American lay dead in his compartment, stabbed a dozen times, his door locked from the inside.
  • Murder on the Orient Express

    Agatha Christie

    Mass Market Paperback (Pocket Books, Sept. 1, 1978)
    Just after midnight, a snowdrift stopped the Orient Express in its tracks. The luxurious train was surprisingly full for the time of the year. But by the morning there was one passenger fewer. An American lay dead in his compartment, stabbed a dozen times, his door locked from the inside.
  • Murder On The Orient Express

    Agatha Christie

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, Aug. 31, 2004)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. On a three-day journey through the snowbound Balkan hills, Hercule Poirot must weed through an array of international suspects to find the passenger who murdered a gangster on the Orient Express.
  • Murder in the Calais Coach

    Agatha Christie

    Paperback (Pocket Books, Jan. 1, 1965)
    Hercule Poirot Mystery
  • Murder on the Orient Express

    Agatha Christie

    Hardcover (G.P. Putnam's Sons, May 15, 1985)
    On a three-day journey through the snowbound Balkan hills, Hercule Poirot tracks down a murderer among the passengers, with a voice in the night as his only clue
  • Murder in the Calais Coach

    Agatha Christie

    Hardcover (Dodd, Mead and Company, Jan. 1, 1934)
    The US title of Murder on the Calais Coach was used to avoid confusion with the 1932 Graham Greene novel Stamboul Train which had been published in the US as Orient Express. The Times Literary Supplement of January 11, 1934 outlined the plot and concluded that "The little grey cells solve once more the seemingly insoluble. Mrs Christie makes an improbable tale very real, and keeps her readers enthralled and guessing to the end."[6] In The New York Times Book Review of March 4, 1934, Isaac Anderson finished by saying, "The great Belgian detective's guesses are more than shrewd; they are positively miraculous. Although both the murder plot and the solution verge upon the impossible, Agatha Christie has contrived to make them appear quite convincing for the time being, and what more than that can a mystery addict desire?"[7] The reviewer in The Guardian of January 12, 1934 stated that the murder would have been “perfect” had Poirot not been on the train and also overheard a conversation between Miss Devonham [sic] and Colonel Arbuthnot before he boarded, however, "'The little grey cells' worked admirably, and the solution surprised their owner as much as it may well surprise the reader, for the secret is well kept and the manner of the telling is in Mrs. Christie’s usual admirable manner.”[8] Robert Barnard: "The best of the railway stories. The Orient Express, snowed up in Yugoslavia, provides the ideal 'closed' set-up for a classic-style exercise in detection, as well as an excuse for an international cast-list. Contains my favourite line in all Christie: 'Poor creature, she's a Swede.' Impeccably clued, with a clever use of the Cyrillic script (cf. The Double Clue). The solution raised the ire of Raymond Chandler, but won't bother anyone who doesn't insist his detective fiction mirror real-life crime."[9] The reference is to Chandler's criticism of Christie in his essay The Simple Art of Murder.
  • Murder on the Orient Express

    Christie

    Paperback (Pocket, Nov. 3, 1982)
    Classic Agatha Christie murder mystery. New movie coming out soon.
  • Murder on the Orient Express

    Agatha Christie

    (Collins Crime Club, Jan. 1, 1974)
    None