![]() ![]() I find this book a huge success and a well-written ending to a series of fantastic books. It was really sad and grim, and there was no true happy ending, but such is life. A wheelchair-bound Poirot returns to Styles, the venue of his first investigation, where he knows another murder is going to take place The house guests at. That was the only way to stop a killer, and he did it.įor me, the book was fantastic. He was dying, he did not have enough time to continue the investigation, and the number of victims was going up + he thought that Hastings might commit the crime in the end. I think that Poirot was just preassured to stop the killer at all costs. And finally, Hastings almost committed a murder. Second, the very nature of the murderer, and the way he committed murders without leaving any trace had a huge impact on his decission in the end. It does not matter whether they had a reason or not, he was always very just.Īll that aside, in the Curtain, Poirot was under the pressure of dying. He did a similar thing in the Orient Express, where he basically let a bunch of murderers get away with a murder. Well, this is not the first time Poirot went out of character. ![]()
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