Murder on the Orient Express
The Simplon-Orient Express is snowbound in Yugoslavia. A man is found murdered in his compartment — stabbed twelve times. Every other passenger has an alibi. Hercule Poirot begins to think.
What Makes This Book Essential
Christie's most celebrated puzzle is also her most audacious. The solution — when Poirot delivers it in the dining car — is one of the great moments in detective fiction, equal parts shocking and inevitable. What makes Orient Express exceptional beyond its famous twist is its structure: Christie writes thirteen interlocking character studies, each a different face of grief and justice.
The novel asks a genuinely moral question: what is justice, and who has the right to administer it? Poirot's final decision is as controversial as the crime itself — Christie is essentially asking whether law and morality are the same thing, and whether we should always answer yes.
First published in 1934, Orient Express has sold over 100 million copies. The Kenneth Branagh film adaptations are entertaining; the original novel is more morally complex. Christie gives you every clue you need to solve it before Poirot does — almost no reader manages it.
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