The Problem of the Green Capsule (1939)


Blurb:


My review:

‘We are travelling in a house of illusions, a box of tricks, a particularly devious sort of ghost-train.'

Carr's version of Agatha Christie's Cards on the Table, and, like that book, as brilliantly tricky a detective story as the reader could wish for.  The rich dilettante Marcus Chesney uses a psychological observation test to demonstrate the method used to poison several children, the revelation of which trick would clear Marjorie Wills, his niece, from suspicion.  She--and two other people--were watching Chesney's on-stage murder, in full view of each other; and Chesney's brother, the only other possible suspect, has a cast-iron alibi.  Nobody could have committed the crime--yet it was committed.  This is the authentic Carr touch, and the solution is typical of 1930s Carr: utterly brilliant, utterly surprising, and utterly convincing.


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