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Cover of And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie

And Then There Were None

by Agatha Christie

5/5
William Morrow Paperbacks 272 pages November 6, 1939

Ten strangers are lured to a remote island off the Devon coast, each harboring a guilty secret. When they start dying one by one — in accordance with a macabre nursery rhyme — paranoia and suspicion consume the survivors as they race to identify the killer among them.

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Jim's Review

🐛
The Queen of Crime at her absolute finest. Jim has read this five times and the solution STILL blows his wormy mind. Christie invented the isolated-group thriller template that everyone copies, and nobody has ever done it better. The tension ratchets up with every death, and that final reveal is diabolical genius. Five worms — the greatest mystery novel ever written, and Jim will fight anyone who disagrees.

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