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Book Reviews of The Golden Ball and Other Stories

The Golden Ball and Other Stories
The Golden Ball and Other Stories
Author: Agatha Christie
ISBN-13: 9780425067833
ISBN-10: 0425067831
Publication Date: 2/1/1984
Pages: 231
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 8

3.9 stars, based on 8 ratings
Publisher: Berkley
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

7 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed The Golden Ball and Other Stories on + 3352 more book reviews
Pub. 1984, copyright 1924. Vintage Christie. 15 short stories.
reviewed The Golden Ball and Other Stories on + 11 more book reviews
In this collection of short stories, the Queen of Crime takes bizarre romantic entanglements, supernatural visitations, and classic murder to inventive new heights.
txladyrah avatar reviewed The Golden Ball and Other Stories on + 180 more book reviews
It was an offer the St. Vincents could not refuse - a splendid mansion, complete with servants, with nothing asked in return! But where was the host? Why was the mysterious butler as tight-lipped and enigmatic as the Sphinx? Most of the family, basking in elegance, is content to ask no questions, but young Rupert St. Vincent suspects a sinister trap, and will not rest until he has unmasked the mastermind behind it all. Fast-paced and thrilling!!!!
celtic-angel avatar reviewed The Golden Ball and Other Stories on
Don't listen to the other reviews about this book.. This book is amazing! It is a bit of a diversion from Christie's typical mystery. These are more love stories. That being said, it helps to be familiar with her other work in order to really appreciate these particular stories. If you are a fan of Christie's work, please give this book a try. It's one of my favorites!
reviewed The Golden Ball and Other Stories on + 62 more book reviews
15 different mysteries by the "Grande Dame of Mystery". A fantastic read.
raksha38 avatar reviewed The Golden Ball and Other Stories on + 203 more book reviews
I really dont like Christies short stories. The elements I dislike about her writing in longer books arent so bad. Like, in The Clocks that stupid subplot about Colin Lamb falling in love and proposing to a woman he admits several times he knows nothing about isnt so bad, since it only comes up about every 50 pages or so and the rest of the time youre focused on the mystery. But in the short stories, theres not pages and pages of other things to distract from the crappy things, so the bad elements are magnified. Seriously, what the hell is with her and having men propose to women they only met that day? The third time I read a short story where that happened, I just about threw the book across the room. And the stories where the couple has been engaged or dating for some time, the story tends to focus on the man becoming completely overbearing and manly and the woman swooning as a result. So gross. Thats what I get for reading books written in 1924, I guess.

And on top of all that, the things I do like about her writing (the intricate mysteries and the winding path the protagonists take toward solving them) arent really present here. By definition, these stories are short, so theres just not time for the mysteries to even get started, much less get complicated.

Still, there were a few stories worth reading sprinkled about. Thats why I didnt stop reading altogether. Jane in Search of a Job was the best one in the book. Jane is in desperate need of work, so she answers an ad in the news paper looking for a woman whose appearance is similar to hers. When she shows up at the appointed time and place, shes hired to be a stand-in for Grand Duchess. Or is she?

On the whole: meh. I think Im done with Agatha Christie for now.
reviewed The Golden Ball and Other Stories on + 70 more book reviews
I was hoping for short mysteries but instead, these seem to be more light romance stories.