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And Then There Were None

Agatha Christie · 1939

Ten strangers with hidden pasts are invited to Indian Island under false pretenses. That night, a gramophone recording accuses each of them of an unpunished murder. Before morning, one of them is dead.

What Makes This Book Essential

The best-selling mystery novel of all time — 100 million copies — earned that status. Christie builds her trap with mathematical precision: a remote island, ten suspects who are also victims, a killer who must be one of them, a death toll that rises relentlessly. The impossibility of the solution is genuine: how can the last person to die be the killer? Christie's answer is completely fair and completely satisfying.

She also achieves something rare in genre fiction — genuine dread. The murders feel wrong, each one stripping away another layer of civilization, exposing what human beings become under existential pressure. The poem posted in every room ('Ten little soldier boys went out to dine / One choked his little self and then there were nine…') transforms from nursery rhyme to countdown to something darker.

And Then There Were None is the most imitated mystery structure in all of fiction and film. Every locked-room mystery written since owes it a debt. Reading the original remains a completely fresh experience.

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