Characters authors kill, why? (Spoilers!)

Well, Leaper, I’m not sure how clear it is that Agatha Christie hated Poirot.

Christie in fact created a character who spoofed herself – Ariadne Oliver, who appeared in several books, beginning with Cards on the Table in 1936. Mrs Oliver writes detective stories that feature an eccentric Finnish detective named Sven Hjerson. Mrs Oliver herself comments:

Poirot dislikes Mrs Oliver’s books because “the long arm of coincidence is far too freely employed.”

I’m not sure if we can project Mrs Oliver’s hatred of her Finnish detective on to Mrs Christie’s reaction to her Belgian.

In any case, and back to the main point, Curtain was the novel in which she killed Poirot off. It was written (I think) in the late 30s or early 40s, but was tucked away and (on her instruction) not published until 1975-76, after Agatha Christie’s death. IIRC, it’s not clear when Curtain is set, reading it gives one the impression that the setting is the 1940s, but Poirot is obviously active and detecting in other books in the 1950s, 60s, and early 70s.

I highly recommend Anne Hart’s book The Life and Times of Hercule Poirot

John Irving’s A Prayer for Owen Meany

The whole story wouldn’t have worked if he didn’t die. But thank goodness we as a society have tragedies…otherwise might as well watch reruns of “Full House” and “Charles in Charles” on the tube.

Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon.

Bobby Shaftoe. Damn, I was saddened and angry to see him go.

In Babylon 5, JMS killed off some characters because of the actors. (Definate spoilers)

The most amusing one was the general who was head of the resistance before he died. They mention him in the episodes beforehand, then when his ship shows up his second in command is actually in charge and says that he’d just been using the name. What actually happened is that the actor double-booked (there’s suspicion the ‘double-booking’ was a snubbing) for the time when he was supposed to shoot the episode, and decided to go with the other shoot, so JMS decided to kill off the character to explain why he didn’t show up. There’s an outtake somewhere where they joke around about it.

Talia Winters was originally supposed to have the storyline that Lita did, but her actress decided to leave the series, so her character pretty much died.

Marcus was originally supposed to be around during season 5, but the actor had made other committments when it looked like S4 was going to be the last one, so JMS wrote him out by having him die to save Ivonova.

In Phillip Farmer’s Riverworld books, everybody has already died once before it starts, and some of them die several times thereafter.

I’d much rather have beloved characters die than have all fiction be the kind where you can rest assured nobody you like is going to die or even have anything really horrible happen.

In a similar vein, I seem to remember Ian Fleming’s killing off James Bond at the hands – well, actually, at the feet – of a female SPECTRE higher-up. (Was this maybe at the end of From Russia, With Love?) He ended up bringing him back later, of course.
RR
Bond. James B<urk! . . . Thud>