

Sprinkled throughout are bits of Marple wisdom on life, her fellow man.and the wickedness of the common man. She carefully read all of the Marple stories and tells us every little tidbit that she has found-from who Miss Marple's relatives are to what might have been her very first case to what a day in the life of Miss Marple is like. I hooked up The Body in the Library with the biography and I was all set.Īnne Hart has done an excellent job mining the Miss Marple series for details about our favorite sleuthing spinster. Fortunately, I had The Life & Times of Miss Jane Marple, a biography of Christie's sleuth, and several unread editions of Miss Marple stories hanging about on the TBR stacks. Having suggested Agatha Christie as an example, I couldn't resist using her-although I've already read the Arsenic book. For example: A is for Arsenic: The Poisons of Agatha Christie and one of Christie's mystery novels that features poison, or The Monuments Men and All the Light We Cannot See. Read two books: a nonfiction book and a fiction book with which it connects.

The next round and my suggestion for the Winter 2016 Challenge was to Twice a year Megan at Semi-Charmed Kind of Life runs the Semi-Charmed Reading Challenge (Summer and Winter editions). But the aftershocks of the election are still rolling the ground underneath me, so I'm not sure how this is going to go.

Follow the Clues Mystery Challenge: My Sign-Up.TNB: History & Mystery.and A Theory of the Cycle.

