How weird is it that Agatha Christie used real people lives when they were still alive?

Strong Poison is good. I thought it was interesting that Sayers made the mystery more about how the murder was done rather than who the murderer was. I agree that the Lord Peter-Harriet relationship was weird. I seem to recall that he basically proposed to her at their first meeting. Not only that, but it was just after her murder trial had ended in a hung jury. Great timing!

I look forward to reading more of Sayers. I have Gaudy Night requested from the library, but there are several people in line ahead of me. Which reminds me: when I started reading these Golden Age mysteries, I was surprised to find that there was such a high demand for them. I’ve had to wait a month or more for some Christie titles from my fairly large suburban Denver library system. That’s some enduring appeal!

Here’s another one:

two people with completely different motives not working together committed the murders

As much as I love Murder on the Orient Express and its movie versions (including the most recent one), I can’t help but wonder how the Lindberghs felt to see their tragedy used as backstory for a bestseller. (Right down to the falsely accused servant girl who killed herself over it.)

Me too, or the fact that Mrs. Lindbergh was pregnant, although the stress did not cause a miscarriage.

And in Gene Tierney’s case, she never sought revenge on the woman (and she did know who it was-- the part of the story where she meets the gushing fan years later is even true), and in fact claimed to have forgiven her. Apparently, there was a cloud over her when the book came out, because a lot of people assumed she had expressed a desire to kill the woman who gave her Rubella.

I’ve read practically all of Christie and much of the work of the others. Some of the American authors gave them a run for their money too, especially Ellery Queen (Dannay and Lee) and John Dickson Carr, the master of the locked room murder. His Hollow Man or The Three Coffins ranks with Christie’s Murder of Roger Ackroyd as one of the cleverest whodunnits ever written.

Perhaps more problematic is that the character based on her in The Mirror Crack’d, besides being a murdered, is a pretty awful person. As I recall, she adopts 3 children and then abandons them the second she becomes pregnant, and she later does not even recognize one of them.

Yeah. Gene Tierney was not an awful person.