The Regatta Mystery

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Cover of The Regatta Mystery
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Cover of The Regatta Mystery

The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories (published 1939) is a collection of nine short stories by Agatha Christie, featuring Hercule Poirot, Miss Marple and Parker Pyne.

  • The Regatta Mystery
  • The Mystery of the Bagdad Chest
  • How Does Your Garden Grow?
  • Problem at Pollensa Bay
  • Yellow Iris
  • Miss Marple Tells a Story
  • The Dream
  • In a Glass Darkly
  • Problem at Sea

The title story has Mr. Parker Pyne catch a diamond thief during regatta festivities at Dartmouth harbor.

The Mystery of the Bagdad Chest concerns how a dead body found its way into the titular chest in the midst of a dance party. Arthur Hastings chronicles Hercule Poirot's unraveling of the mystery.

How Does Your Garden Grow? is a line from the nursery rhyme "Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary," which Poirot is reminded of when visiting a country house whose mistress has just died -- after writing a cryptic letter requesting his help.

The Problem at Pollensa Bay concerns a mother's dislike for her son's fiance. The problem is solved (non-violently) by fellow vacationer Parker Pyne.

In Yellow Iris, Hercule Poirot follows an anonymous phone call to a restaurant table laden with the favorite flower of a woman who died mysteriously four years before.

Miss Marple Tells a Story is written in the first person by the elderly sleuth, who recalls how she solved an impossible murder without leaving her chair.

In The Dream, an eccentric millionaire tells Poirot of a troubling dream in which he kills himself -- and is found dead the next day.

In a Glass Darkly is the only story in the collection not to feature a famous detective (it is told by an anonymous narrator), and the only one to invoke the supernatural. Its title alludes to the phrase "Through a glass darkly," used by the Apostle Paul to describe how we currently view the world.

In Problem at Sea, a rich woman is found dead in her cabin on a luxury ship off the shore of Alexandria. It concludes with Hercule Poirot saying: "I do not approve of murder."

Agatha Christie
Detectives: Hercule PoirotMiss MarpleTommy and TuppenceAriadne OliverArthur HastingsSuperintendent BattleChief Inspector JappParker Pyne
Novels: The Mysterious Affair at StylesThe Secret AdversaryMurder on the LinksThe Man in the Brown SuitThe Secret of ChimneysThe Murder of Roger AckroydThe Big FourThe Mystery of the Blue TrainThe Seven Dials MysteryThe Murder at the VicarageThe Sittaford MysteryPeril at End HouseLord Edgware DiesMurder on the Orient ExpressThree Act TragedyWhy Didn't They Ask Evans?Death in the CloudsThe A.B.C. MurdersMurder in MesopotamiaCards on the TableDeath on the NileDumb WitnessAppointment with DeathAnd Then There Were NoneMurder is EasyHercule Poirot's ChristmasSad CypressEvil Under the SunN or M?One, Two, Buckle My ShoeThe Body in the LibraryFive Little PigsThe Moving FingerTowards ZeroSparkling CyanideDeath Comes as the EndThe HollowTaken at the FloodCrooked HouseA Murder is AnnouncedThey Came to BaghdadMrs McGinty's DeadThey Do It with MirrorsA Pocket Full of RyeAfter the FuneralHickory Dickory DockDestination UnknownDead Man's Folly4.50 From PaddingtonOrdeal by InnocenceCat Among the PigeonsThe Pale HorseThe Mirror Crack'd from Side to SideThe ClocksA Caribbean MysteryAt Bertram's HotelThird GirlEndless NightBy the Pricking of My ThumbsHallowe'en PartyPassenger to FrankfurtNemesisElephants Can RememberPostern of FateCurtainSleeping Murder
As Mary Westmacott: Giant's BreadUnfinished PortraitAbsent in the SpringThe Rose and the Yew TreeA Daughter's a DaughterThe Burden
Short story collections: Poirot InvestigatesPartners in CrimeThe Mysterious Mr. QuinThe Hound of DeathThe Thirteen ProblemsParker Pyne InvestigatesThe Listerdale MysteryMurder in the MewsThe Regatta MysteryThe Labours of HerculesPoirot's Early CasesThe Harlequin Tea Set
Plays: AkhnatonThe MousetrapWitness for the ProsecutionVerdictRule of ThreeFiddlers Three
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