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Crooked House

Crooked House is a work of detective fiction by Agatha Christie first published in the US by Dodd, Mead and Company in March 1949[1] and in the UK by the Collins Crime Club on 23 May of the same year.[2]

Crooked House
Dust-jacket illustration of the UK first edition.
AuthorAgatha Christie
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreCrime novel
PublisherDodd, Mead and Company
Publication date
March 1949
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages211 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN978-0-00-713686-5
Preceded byThe Rose and the Yew Tree 
Followed byA Murder Is Announced 

The action takes place in and near London in the autumn of 1947. Christie said the titles of this novel and Ordeal by Innocence were her favourites amongst her own works.

Title meaning edit

The title refers to a nursery rhyme ("There Was a Crooked Man"), a common theme of the author. Narrator Charles's fiancée Sophia says it refers not to dishonesty, but rather "we hadn't been able to grow up independent... twisted and twining", meaning unhealthily interdependent on the intensely strong personality of the family patriarch, Aristide Leonides.

Plot introduction edit

Three generations of the Leonides family live together under wealthy patriarch Aristide. His first wife Marcia died; her sister Edith has cared for the household since then. His second wife is the indolent Brenda, decades his junior, suspected of having a clandestine love affair with Laurence, the grandchildren's tutor. After Aristide is poisoned by his own eye medicine (eserine), his granddaughter Sophia tells narrator and fiancé Charles Hayward that they cannot marry until the killer is apprehended. Charles's father, "The Old Man", is Assistant Commissioner of Scotland Yard, so Charles investigates from the inside along with assigned detective Chief Inspector Taverner.

Plot summary edit

Towards the end of the Second World War, Charles Hayward is in Cairo and falls in love with Sophia Leonides, a smart, successful Englishwoman who works for the Foreign Office. They put off getting engaged until the end of the war when they will be reunited in England.

Hayward returns home and reads a death notice in The Times: Sophia's grandfather, the wealthy entrepreneur Aristide Leonides, has died, aged 85. Due to the war, the whole family has been living with him in a sumptuous but ill-proportioned house called "Three Gables", the crooked house of the title. The autopsy reveals that Leonides was poisoned with his own eserine-based eye medicine via an insulin injection. Sophia tells Charles that she can't marry him until the matter is cleared up.

The obvious suspects are Brenda Leonides, Aristide's much younger second wife, and Laurence Brown, a conscientious objector who has been living in the house as private tutor to Sophia's younger brother and sister, Eustace and Josephine. They are rumoured to have been carrying on an illicit love affair under old Leonides's nose. The family members hope these two prove to be the murderers because they despise Brenda as a gold digger and also hope to escape the scandal that a different outcome would bring. Charles agrees to help his father, an assistant commissioner of Scotland Yard, to investigate the crime. He becomes a house guest at Three Gables, hoping that someone might reveal a clue at an unguarded moment.

All the family members had motive and opportunity, none has an alibi; and each of them knew that Aristide's eye medicine was poisonous as he had told all the family after being asked by Josephine. According to the will, they all stand to gain a healthy bequest from the old man's estate. The servants do not get bequests but would lose their (increasing) annual wages or bonuses, so are not suspects. Aside from this, the family members have little in common. Edith de Haviland, Aristide's unmarried sister-in-law, is a brusque woman in her 70s who came to stay with him after his first wife's death to supervise his children's upbringing. Roger, the eldest son and Aristide's favourite, is a failure as a businessman. He has steered the catering business bestowed to him by his father to the brink of bankruptcy and he longs to live a simple life somewhere far away. Roger's wife Clemency, a scientist with austere and unsentimental tastes, has never been able to enjoy the wealth offered by her husband's family. Roger's younger brother, Philip, has suffered under his father's preference for Roger, and retreated into a distant world of books and bygone historical epochs, spending all his waking hours in the library. Philip's wife Magda is an only moderately successful actress to whom everything, even a family murder, is a stage show in which she wants to play a leading part. Sixteen-year-old Eustace has polio. He is handsome and intelligent, yet embittered by his disability. His twelve-year-old sister Josephine, on the other hand, is ugly, precociously intelligent, and obsessed with detective stories. She spies continually on the rest of the household, letting everyone know that she is writing down her observations in a secret notebook.

Leonides had secretly personally rewritten (to the surprise of his lawyer Mr Gaitskill) his will to leave everything to Philip's daughter Sophia. He believed that she alone had the strength of character to assume his place as the head of the family. Josephine, who had been bragging that she knows the killer's identity, is found lying unconscious in the yard from a blow to the head from a marble doorstop. Charles discovers a cache of incriminating love letters from Brenda to Laurence, and the two are arrested. While they are in custody, the children's nanny dies after drinking a digitalis-laced cup of cocoa that had apparently been intended for Josephine. The family realises that the killer is still among them.

Charles, afraid for Josephine's life, tries in vain to induce her to disclose the murderer's name. Edith de Haviland invites Josephine to come out with her in the car for an ice cream soda. The car drives over a cliff and both are killed. Back at Three Gables, Charles finds two letters from Miss de Haviland. One is a suicide note for Chief Inspector Taverner taking responsibility, although not explicitly confessing, to the murders of Aristide and Nanny. The second letter, intended for Sophia and Charles only, reveals the truth of the matter: Josephine was the murderer. As proof, de Haviland has enclosed the child's secret notebook, the first line of which reads "Today I killed grandfather."

Josephine killed her grandfather because he wouldn't pay for her ballet lessons; she then revelled in all the attention she received afterwards and planned her own assault with the marble doorstop as a way of diverting attention. She poisoned Nanny for encouraging Magda to send her to Switzerland, and also because Nanny called her a "silly little girl". She also included threats against Magda if her mother seriously considered sending her away. Miss de Haviland had discovered Josephine's notebook hidden in a dog kennel, and committed the murder-suicide car crash as she did not want Josephine to suffer in a prison or asylum if and when the police learned she was the murderer.

Characters edit

  • Charles Hayward, fiancé to Sophia Leonides, narrator
  • Sophia Leonides, daughter of Magda and Philip Leonides, granddaughter of Aristide
  • Brenda Leonides, spoiled much younger widow of Aristide Leonides, married at 24 and now aged 34 years
  • Magda West, a flamboyant stage actress
  • Edith de Haviland, Sophia's elderly spinster great-aunt, sister of Aristide Leonides' first wife, Marcia de Haviland
  • Roger Leonides, son of Aristide Leonides
  • Clemency Leonides, his wife, a scientist
  • Philip Leonides, Magda's husband and Roger's brother
  • Laurence Brown, tutor to Josephine and Eustace; in love with Brenda. Aged about 30
  • Josephine Leonides, Magda's 12-year-old daughter
  • Eustace Leonides, Magda's 16-year-old son; brother of Sophia and Josephine
  • Janet Rowe, nanny to the Leonides children
  • Chief Inspector Taverner, Scotland Yard inspector assigned
  • "The Old Man", Sir Arthur Hayward, Assistant Commissioner of Scotland Yard, father of Charles Hayward
  • Aristide Leonides, the man who was murdered; born in Smyrna, Turkey, he arrived in London in 1884 when he was 24
  • Mr Gaitskill, his family (but not always business) solicitor for 43½ years

Reception edit

Maurice Richardson, in the 29 May 1949 issue of The Observer, gave a positive review in comparison to his opinion of Taken at the Flood the previous year: "Her forty-ninth book and one of her best seven. Poisoning of aged iniquitous anglicised Levantine millionaire. Nicely characterised family of suspects. Delicious red herrings. Infinite suspense and shocking surprise finish make up for slight looseness of texture."[3]

An unnamed reviewer in the Toronto Daily Star of 12 March 1949 wrote: "Chief Inspector Taverner of Scotland Yard was as brilliant as usual but barking up the wrong tree – as Agatha Christie demonstrates in a surprise ending which introduces a novel idea in murder mystery."[4]

Robert Barnard: "'Pure pleasure' was how the author described the writing of this, which was long planned, and remained one of her favourites. As the title implies, this is a family murder – and a very odd family indeed. The solution, one of the classic ones, was anticipated (but much less effectively) in Margery Allingham's 'prentice work The White Cottage Mystery."[5]

In the "Binge!" article of Entertainment Weekly Issue #1343-44 (26 December 2014–3 January 2015), the writers picked Crooked House as an "EW favorite" on the list of the "Nine Great Christie Novels".[6]

Film, TV or theatrical adaptations edit

The novel was adapted for BBC Radio 4 in four weekly 30-minute episodes which began broadcasting on 29 February 2008. It starred Rory Kinnear (Charles Hayward), Anna Maxwell Martin (Sophia Leonides), and Phil Davis (Chief Insp. Taverner). The radio play was dramatised by Joy Wilkinson and directed by Sam Hoyle. It was subsequently issued on CD. This version removed the character of Eustace.

In 2011, US filmmaker Neil La Bute announced that he would be directing a feature film version, for 2012, of the novel with a script by Julian Fellowes.[7] On 15 May 2011, Gemma Arterton, Matthew Goode, Gabriel Byrne and Dame Julie Andrews were announced to lead the cast.[8] In a report issued on 10 June 2012, Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions acquired all rights in the US, Canada and internationally for the film, which could help secure it a lucrative release, though the cast and creative team had changed.

The film, directed by Gilles Paquet-Brenner and starring Christina Hendricks, Gillian Anderson, Max Irons, Glenn Close, Julian Sands, Terence Stamp, Stefanie Martini and Christian McKay, was released digitally on 21 November 2017 and first broadcast on Channel 5 on 17 December 2017.[9] On 22 December 2017, it received a modest (16 theatres) theatrical release in the U.S. via Vertical Entertainment.

The adaptation was largely faithful to the source material, but also featured several changes. The story is set a decade later in the late 1950s; Charles's father, Sir Arthur Hayward, is deceased, having been murdered previously, and Chief Inspector Taverner assumes some of the role played by Sir Arthur in the novel; Charles and Sophia are no longer in a relationship and have been estranged for some time, although the film's ending is open-ended as to whether they will reconcile; Nanny is poisoned by cyanide, not digitalis; Lady Edith addresses her confession note to Charles instead of Taverner; Lady Edith does not leave the second letter for Charles and Sophia outlining Josephine as the killer. Instead, Charles finds Josephine's notebook, which Charles and Sophia use as confirmation that Josephine is the killer; and the ages of Philip and Roger are switched, so Philip becomes the eldest son, forming part of his motive to kill Aristide as he had been passed over to run the family business for his younger brother, Roger.

Publication history edit

  • 1949, Dodd Mead and Company (New York), March 1949, Hardback, 211 pp
  • 1949, Collins Crime Club (London), 23 May 1949, Hardback, 192 pp
  • 1951, Pocket Books (New York), Paperback, (Pocket #753), 200 pp
  • 1953, Penguin Books, Paperback, (Penguin #925), 191 pp
  • 1959, Fontana Books (Imprint of HarperCollins), Paperback, 191 pp
  • 1967, Greenway collected works (William Collins), Hardcover, 223 pp
  • 1967, Greenway collected works (Dodd Mead), Hardcover, 223 pp
  • 1978 Omniprose collected works with Passenger to Frankfurt, Hardcover, 472 pp, ISBN 0921111096
  • 1991, Ulverscroft Large-print Edition, Hardcover, ISBN 0-7089-2419-0

A condensed version of the novel was first published in the US in Cosmopolitan magazine in the issue for October 1948 (Volume 125, Number 4) with an illustration by Grushkin.

In the UK the novel was first serialised in the weekly magazine John Bull in seven abridged instalments from 23 April (Volume 85, Number 2234) to 4 June 1949 (Volume 85, Number 2240) with illustrations by Alfred Sindall.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ American Tribute to Agatha Christie
  2. ^ The Scotsman 19 May 1949 (p. 9)
  3. ^ The Observer, 29 May 1949 (p. 8)
  4. ^ Toronto Daily Star, 12 March 1949 (p. 29)
  5. ^ Barnard, Robert. A Talent to Deceive – an appreciation of Agatha Christie – Revised edition (p. 190). Fontana Books, 1990. ISBN 0-00-637474-3
  6. ^ "Binge! Agatha Christie: Nine Great Christie Novels". Entertainment Weekly. No. 1343–44. 26 December 2014. pp. 32–33.
  7. ^ Eden, Richard (20 March 2011). "'Downton Abbey' creator Julian Fellowes to make Agatha Christie fashionable again". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  8. ^ Higgins, Charlotte (15 May 2011). "Cannes 2011: Neil LaBute turns his macabre hand to Agatha Christie". The Guardian. London.
  9. ^ Cohn, Gary (21 November 2017). "What's on TV Tuesday: 'Crooked House' and 'Who Killed Tupac?'". New York Times.
  10. ^ Holdings at the British Library (Newspapers – Colindale). Shelfmark: NPL LON LD116.

External links edit

    crooked, house, other, uses, disambiguation, work, detective, fiction, agatha, christie, first, published, dodd, mead, company, march, 1949, collins, crime, club, same, year, dust, jacket, illustration, first, edition, authoragatha, christiecountryunited, king. For other uses see Crooked House disambiguation Crooked House is a work of detective fiction by Agatha Christie first published in the US by Dodd Mead and Company in March 1949 1 and in the UK by the Collins Crime Club on 23 May of the same year 2 Crooked HouseDust jacket illustration of the UK first edition AuthorAgatha ChristieCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishGenreCrime novelPublisherDodd Mead and CompanyPublication dateMarch 1949Media typePrint hardback amp paperback Pages211 pp first edition hardback ISBN978 0 00 713686 5Preceded byThe Rose and the Yew Tree Followed byA Murder Is Announced The action takes place in and near London in the autumn of 1947 Christie said the titles of this novel and Ordeal by Innocence were her favourites amongst her own works Contents 1 Title meaning 2 Plot introduction 3 Plot summary 4 Characters 5 Reception 6 Film TV or theatrical adaptations 7 Publication history 8 References 9 External linksTitle meaning editThe title refers to a nursery rhyme There Was a Crooked Man a common theme of the author Narrator Charles s fiancee Sophia says it refers not to dishonesty but rather we hadn t been able to grow up independent twisted and twining meaning unhealthily interdependent on the intensely strong personality of the family patriarch Aristide Leonides Plot introduction editThree generations of the Leonides family live together under wealthy patriarch Aristide His first wife Marcia died her sister Edith has cared for the household since then His second wife is the indolent Brenda decades his junior suspected of having a clandestine love affair with Laurence the grandchildren s tutor After Aristide is poisoned by his own eye medicine eserine his granddaughter Sophia tells narrator and fiance Charles Hayward that they cannot marry until the killer is apprehended Charles s father The Old Man is Assistant Commissioner of Scotland Yard so Charles investigates from the inside along with assigned detective Chief Inspector Taverner Plot summary editTowards the end of the Second World War Charles Hayward is in Cairo and falls in love with Sophia Leonides a smart successful Englishwoman who works for the Foreign Office They put off getting engaged until the end of the war when they will be reunited in England Hayward returns home and reads a death notice in The Times Sophia s grandfather the wealthy entrepreneur Aristide Leonides has died aged 85 Due to the war the whole family has been living with him in a sumptuous but ill proportioned house called Three Gables the crooked house of the title The autopsy reveals that Leonides was poisoned with his own eserine based eye medicine via an insulin injection Sophia tells Charles that she can t marry him until the matter is cleared up The obvious suspects are Brenda Leonides Aristide s much younger second wife and Laurence Brown a conscientious objector who has been living in the house as private tutor to Sophia s younger brother and sister Eustace and Josephine They are rumoured to have been carrying on an illicit love affair under old Leonides s nose The family members hope these two prove to be the murderers because they despise Brenda as a gold digger and also hope to escape the scandal that a different outcome would bring Charles agrees to help his father an assistant commissioner of Scotland Yard to investigate the crime He becomes a house guest at Three Gables hoping that someone might reveal a clue at an unguarded moment All the family members had motive and opportunity none has an alibi and each of them knew that Aristide s eye medicine was poisonous as he had told all the family after being asked by Josephine According to the will they all stand to gain a healthy bequest from the old man s estate The servants do not get bequests but would lose their increasing annual wages or bonuses so are not suspects Aside from this the family members have little in common Edith de Haviland Aristide s unmarried sister in law is a brusque woman in her 70s who came to stay with him after his first wife s death to supervise his children s upbringing Roger the eldest son and Aristide s favourite is a failure as a businessman He has steered the catering business bestowed to him by his father to the brink of bankruptcy and he longs to live a simple life somewhere far away Roger s wife Clemency a scientist with austere and unsentimental tastes has never been able to enjoy the wealth offered by her husband s family Roger s younger brother Philip has suffered under his father s preference for Roger and retreated into a distant world of books and bygone historical epochs spending all his waking hours in the library Philip s wife Magda is an only moderately successful actress to whom everything even a family murder is a stage show in which she wants to play a leading part Sixteen year old Eustace has polio He is handsome and intelligent yet embittered by his disability His twelve year old sister Josephine on the other hand is ugly precociously intelligent and obsessed with detective stories She spies continually on the rest of the household letting everyone know that she is writing down her observations in a secret notebook Leonides had secretly personally rewritten to the surprise of his lawyer Mr Gaitskill his will to leave everything to Philip s daughter Sophia He believed that she alone had the strength of character to assume his place as the head of the family Josephine who had been bragging that she knows the killer s identity is found lying unconscious in the yard from a blow to the head from a marble doorstop Charles discovers a cache of incriminating love letters from Brenda to Laurence and the two are arrested While they are in custody the children s nanny dies after drinking a digitalis laced cup of cocoa that had apparently been intended for Josephine The family realises that the killer is still among them Charles afraid for Josephine s life tries in vain to induce her to disclose the murderer s name Edith de Haviland invites Josephine to come out with her in the car for an ice cream soda The car drives over a cliff and both are killed Back at Three Gables Charles finds two letters from Miss de Haviland One is a suicide note for Chief Inspector Taverner taking responsibility although not explicitly confessing to the murders of Aristide and Nanny The second letter intended for Sophia and Charles only reveals the truth of the matter Josephine was the murderer As proof de Haviland has enclosed the child s secret notebook the first line of which reads Today I killed grandfather Josephine killed her grandfather because he wouldn t pay for her ballet lessons she then revelled in all the attention she received afterwards and planned her own assault with the marble doorstop as a way of diverting attention She poisoned Nanny for encouraging Magda to send her to Switzerland and also because Nanny called her a silly little girl She also included threats against Magda if her mother seriously considered sending her away Miss de Haviland had discovered Josephine s notebook hidden in a dog kennel and committed the murder suicide car crash as she did not want Josephine to suffer in a prison or asylum if and when the police learned she was the murderer Characters editCharles Hayward fiance to Sophia Leonides narrator Sophia Leonides daughter of Magda and Philip Leonides granddaughter of Aristide Brenda Leonides spoiled much younger widow of Aristide Leonides married at 24 and now aged 34 years Magda West a flamboyant stage actress Edith de Haviland Sophia s elderly spinster great aunt sister of Aristide Leonides first wife Marcia de Haviland Roger Leonides son of Aristide Leonides Clemency Leonides his wife a scientist Philip Leonides Magda s husband and Roger s brother Laurence Brown tutor to Josephine and Eustace in love with Brenda Aged about 30 Josephine Leonides Magda s 12 year old daughter Eustace Leonides Magda s 16 year old son brother of Sophia and Josephine Janet Rowe nanny to the Leonides children Chief Inspector Taverner Scotland Yard inspector assigned The Old Man Sir Arthur Hayward Assistant Commissioner of Scotland Yard father of Charles Hayward Aristide Leonides the man who was murdered born in Smyrna Turkey he arrived in London in 1884 when he was 24 Mr Gaitskill his family but not always business solicitor for 43 yearsReception editMaurice Richardson in the 29 May 1949 issue of The Observer gave a positive review in comparison to his opinion of Taken at the Flood the previous year Her forty ninth book and one of her best seven Poisoning of aged iniquitous anglicised Levantine millionaire Nicely characterised family of suspects Delicious red herrings Infinite suspense and shocking surprise finish make up for slight looseness of texture 3 An unnamed reviewer in the Toronto Daily Star of 12 March 1949 wrote Chief Inspector Taverner of Scotland Yard was as brilliant as usual but barking up the wrong tree as Agatha Christie demonstrates in a surprise ending which introduces a novel idea in murder mystery 4 Robert Barnard Pure pleasure was how the author described the writing of this which was long planned and remained one of her favourites As the title implies this is a family murder and a very odd family indeed The solution one of the classic ones was anticipated but much less effectively in Margery Allingham s prentice work The White Cottage Mystery 5 In the Binge article of Entertainment Weekly Issue 1343 44 26 December 2014 3 January 2015 the writers picked Crooked House as an EW favorite on the list of the Nine Great Christie Novels 6 Film TV or theatrical adaptations editThe novel was adapted for BBC Radio 4 in four weekly 30 minute episodes which began broadcasting on 29 February 2008 It starred Rory Kinnear Charles Hayward Anna Maxwell Martin Sophia Leonides and Phil Davis Chief Insp Taverner The radio play was dramatised by Joy Wilkinson and directed by Sam Hoyle It was subsequently issued on CD This version removed the character of Eustace In 2011 US filmmaker Neil La Bute announced that he would be directing a feature film version for 2012 of the novel with a script by Julian Fellowes 7 On 15 May 2011 Gemma Arterton Matthew Goode Gabriel Byrne and Dame Julie Andrews were announced to lead the cast 8 In a report issued on 10 June 2012 Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions acquired all rights in the US Canada and internationally for the film which could help secure it a lucrative release though the cast and creative team had changed The film directed by Gilles Paquet Brenner and starring Christina Hendricks Gillian Anderson Max Irons Glenn Close Julian Sands Terence Stamp Stefanie Martini and Christian McKay was released digitally on 21 November 2017 and first broadcast on Channel 5 on 17 December 2017 9 On 22 December 2017 it received a modest 16 theatres theatrical release in the U S via Vertical Entertainment The adaptation was largely faithful to the source material but also featured several changes The story is set a decade later in the late 1950s Charles s father Sir Arthur Hayward is deceased having been murdered previously and Chief Inspector Taverner assumes some of the role played by Sir Arthur in the novel Charles and Sophia are no longer in a relationship and have been estranged for some time although the film s ending is open ended as to whether they will reconcile Nanny is poisoned by cyanide not digitalis Lady Edith addresses her confession note to Charles instead of Taverner Lady Edith does not leave the second letter for Charles and Sophia outlining Josephine as the killer Instead Charles finds Josephine s notebook which Charles and Sophia use as confirmation that Josephine is the killer and the ages of Philip and Roger are switched so Philip becomes the eldest son forming part of his motive to kill Aristide as he had been passed over to run the family business for his younger brother Roger Publication history edit1949 Dodd Mead and Company New York March 1949 Hardback 211 pp 1949 Collins Crime Club London 23 May 1949 Hardback 192 pp 1951 Pocket Books New York Paperback Pocket 753 200 pp 1953 Penguin Books Paperback Penguin 925 191 pp 1959 Fontana Books Imprint of HarperCollins Paperback 191 pp 1967 Greenway collected works William Collins Hardcover 223 pp 1967 Greenway collected works Dodd Mead Hardcover 223 pp 1978 Omniprose collected works with Passenger to Frankfurt Hardcover 472 pp ISBN 0921111096 1991 Ulverscroft Large print Edition Hardcover ISBN 0 7089 2419 0A condensed version of the novel was first published in the US in Cosmopolitan magazine in the issue for October 1948 Volume 125 Number 4 with an illustration by Grushkin In the UK the novel was first serialised in the weekly magazine John Bull in seven abridged instalments from 23 April Volume 85 Number 2234 to 4 June 1949 Volume 85 Number 2240 with illustrations by Alfred Sindall 10 References edit American Tribute to Agatha Christie The Scotsman 19 May 1949 p 9 The Observer 29 May 1949 p 8 Toronto Daily Star 12 March 1949 p 29 Barnard Robert A Talent to Deceive an appreciation of Agatha Christie Revised edition p 190 Fontana Books 1990 ISBN 0 00 637474 3 Binge Agatha Christie Nine Great Christie Novels Entertainment Weekly No 1343 44 26 December 2014 pp 32 33 Eden Richard 20 March 2011 Downton Abbey creator Julian Fellowes to make Agatha Christie fashionable again The Daily Telegraph London Higgins Charlotte 15 May 2011 Cannes 2011 Neil LaBute turns his macabre hand to Agatha Christie The Guardian London Cohn Gary 21 November 2017 What s on TV Tuesday Crooked House and Who Killed Tupac New York Times Holdings at the British Library Newspapers Colindale Shelfmark NPL LON LD116 External links editCrooked House at the official Agatha Christie website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crooked House amp oldid 1156624646, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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