Stabbed through eye with hat pin
This very gruesome idea is untypical of Christie, its attraction probably the difficulty of spotting the means of death. It also appears in three other Notebooks.
Isotope idea—Carbon 14—hypodermic injection (for typhoid?) normal procedure. He (?) is going abroad appointment—with local doctor—his place is taken by impostor who gives so-called typhoid injection.
This idea, inspired by a visit to a laboratory during a US visit in the 1960s, has strong echoes of
Committee crime—Mr Llewellyn—tiresome woman—makes speech—drinks glass of water
Glass of water—Dr Haydock…Suicide because of anonymous letter? At Harton Parva—the vicar’s sister— vinegary woman—the school teacher—at village shop vicar’s sister gets groceries—lays down letters—girl slips one in
These jottings appear in the same Notebook, the first one in a list of projected Miss Marple short stories. And it seems very much Miss Marple’s territory. The seeds of
Disappearance of actress—strange behaviour of head gardener
This wonderfully enigmatic combination of ideas appears in Notebook 65 alongside the notes for
A blonde millionaire’s daughter kidnaps herself so as to get away to marry young man
This surfaces three times in the Notebooks, each time specifying a blonde perpetrator. It sounds relatively non-criminal and may have been intended as a light-hearted story, not unlike one of Tommy and Tuppence’s early adventures—‘A Pot of Tea’.
Tom, Dick or Harry come to Bridge—point—none of them existed!
Tempting though it is to believe that this is a reference to
Infra Red photograph
This unusual idea may have been inspired by her interest in photography during her archaeological work with Sir Max Mallowan. It appears in a list of possible Miss Marple stories, although it would not appear to be one with which Miss Marple might be familiar.
Dangerous drugs stolen from car—doctor very upset—excitement in village
Dangerous drugs stolen from doctor’s car—X goes touring in car—follows a doctor in strange town—or Doctor himself is criminal—later marries dead patient’s wife or daughter
Although it never appears as a plot device in its own right, this scenario is one of those mentioned in
A false Hercule P.—he is in some hotel lunching re-growing one of his moustaches which have been burnt— wild out of the way spot
The ‘wild out of the way spot’ may be the setting of ‘The Erymanthian Boar’, the snowbound top of a Swiss mountain, but the moustache regrowing was never explored despite its appearance in two other Notebooks.
10
Sanctuary: A Holiday for Murder
‘Well—to put it plainly—do you come to places expecting a holiday from crime—and find instead bodies cropping up?’
‘It has happened, yes; more than once.’
Holidays and festivals have provided backgrounds for a number of Christie stories. Some of them—
While holidaying in St Loo Poirot and Hastings meet Nick Buckley, the impoverished owner of End House. When she tells them that she has had three close brushes with death, Poirot investigates, but is unable to avert a real tragedy at End House.