Reading The Labours of Hercules for another time before (you guessed it right!) I recycle it and declutter my ever-exploding book shelf. But I digress. Even though it has been a while since I last read Agatha Christie, her words still cast a spell on me, compelling me to read about the challenges Hercule Poirot undertakes.
Perhaps Hercule Poirot has always been compared to Sherlock Holmes, but to me, he occupies a distinctive top-of-mind space. He oozes with eccentricities - flexing his potent little grey cells, showing displeasure whenever someone expresses ignorable about his work, admiring the beauty of the female form, twirling his moustache, among others. To read about someone who is at the top of his profession and is supremely confident about his prowess enticed me greatly when I was a teenager.
Now, as I reread this book, it is with enhanced appreciation because I have learnt that Agatha Christie had dyslexia. This might or might not account for her intricate web of details her novels typically showcase. So elaborate, yet satisfyingly tied together like a ribbon on a birthday present. I was mindful enough to pick up some new vocabulary words this time round. Fusillade. Stupefaction. Odoriferous. I don’t think people use these words often in their speech or writing these days, so her word choice lends a quaint charm to her novels.
And on to you. Which detective are you enamoured with?
Detective Columbo
reply
“Just one more thing”
reply
good choice
reply
How many Mickey Spillane characters will end up on this list?!
reply
reply
I was literally scrolling down to reply, inspector gadget and saw this. Best me to it. I used to wake up extra early on school days, at 5 am, to catch the inspector. Classic.
reply
There is only one: inspector Jacques Clouseau !!! ;-)
reply
Detective Gumshoe from the Phoenix Wright series
reply
Sherlock Holmes, my dear Watson!
reply
Did you watch the TV series?
reply
no TV series... which one? I can't remember
reply
Sherlock, a British series starred by Benedict Cumberbatch
reply
No
He is a good actor
reply
Lupin! Have you ever read his books?
reply
I must say I haven’t! I see that there’s a Netflix series on him. Will watch it n get back to you
reply
Maurice leblanc.
reply
he is not a detective is a Gentelman Burgle
reply
Half of the novels are him being a detective.
reply
it s a kind of detective, but on the books:
It s written : Arsene Lupin, Gentlemen Thief
reply
Nero Wolfe
reply
For me, both Hercule Piorot and Sherlock Holmes are well-structured detectives by their authors. But although the question is about a detective, I would like to share with you that the character that catches my attention the most and motivated me in reading detectives has been ARSEN LUPIN.
I'm sorry, he even seems smarter than the detectives to me.
reply
Mr bean
reply
Chloe Decker from Lucifer
reply
Jeffrey Lebowski
reply
21 sats \ 0 replies \ @OT 5 Sep
Inspector Gadget! But mainly cause of the music. Killer bass line
reply
Sherlock Holmes
reply
Columbo
reply
James bond
reply
he is not a detective lol
reply
Detective Conan is my favorite detective. The detective whom shrink in size.
reply
I actually visited the Conan museum at Totori before! But I liked Kindaichi (another Japanese anime detective) much better haha
reply
It's loaed from spy x family
reply
I never actually finished watching the anime series. You must have enjoyed it
reply
From same author, Miss Marple was great too!
reply
Yes I love her n her interest in human nature!
reply
The fave of mine Veronica Mars.
reply
No love for Monk over here?
I've been someone to seek out detective stories, so I have nothing much to compare it to, but I remember that it was a pretty decent show.
More recently, I thought Benoit Blank (Glass Onion) was a pretty quirky character.
reply
*never been someone
reply
Heh. I could go on for days here. I've read a lot of detective novels, and it's one of my favorite genres in general. Having just one fave seems impossible.
Poirot and Holmes remain two of my faves, the classic examples of quirky and brilliant men who could make intuitive leaps no one else could.
My other favorite golden age detective is John Dickson Carr's Dr. Gideon Fell. Carr was a specialist in bizarre locked room situations, and Fell was a fantastic detective who always put together a solution.
Moving forward, Hammett's The Continental Op is my favorite of the classic hardboiled bunch, and Red Harvest remains such an important book.
After that, Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe and Ross Macdonald's Lew Archer are probably my favorite midcentury detectives, both evolving the form dramatically in different directions.
Then there's John D MacDonald's Travis McGee, the classic '60s/'70s outsider, a guy living on a boat and just enjoying his life until he gets pulled into a new case. Meanwhile, Gregory McDonald's Fletch gave us the gifted amateur detective who just keeps stumbling into new cases.
(I have no idea why so many variants of "MacDonald" end up writing detective books, though "Ross MacDonald" was a pseudonym.)
Then the '80s gave us two great hardboiled female detectives (and with all due respect to Miss Marple and Amanda Cross's Kate Fansler, these both surpassed all previous ones), in Paretsky's V.I. Warshawski and Grafton's Kinsey Millhone. Millhone's probably my favorite late-twentieth-century detective.
This century, I'm huge fan of Laura Lippman's Tess Monaghan (a hardboiled former journalist), Lee Child's Jack Reacher (a taciturn former military policeman), and Louise Penny's Inspector Gamache (a police detective from Quebec who takes a compassionate and unusual approach to his cases, many of which end up in the same small arts community).
reply
I really like "true detective"
I have seen 3 series and each one is standalone story. I recommend to whatch.
reply
Batman, well theoretically. In my days of reading comic books of ‘the world’s greatest detective’ rarely was he conducting any detective work of note.
I should really read an Agatha Christie Peroit.
reply
Sam Spade and Mike Hammer
reply
Nero wolf
reply
Mr bean
reply