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The Labors of Hercules
  

The Labors of Hercules (Paperback)

by Agatha Christie (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Product Description

San Francisco Chronicle

Richly devious and quite brilliant. --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.


Book Description

A unique collection of stories featuring Hercule Poirot and linked by mythological figures and classical legend and lore. It's everything "Christie's admirers have come to expect" (New Yorker), including her fans' favorite detective in a dozen of his most unusual cases. --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

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11 Reviews
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4.0 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars 20th century Hercules, May 15 2004
By Jeanne Tassotto (Trapped in the Midwest) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This 1947 short story collection opens in Poirot's London apartment where he is spending an evening with an old friend, Dr. Burton. The subject turns to names and Dr. Burton asks Poirot about his unusual first name, implying that Poirot does not resemble the original Hercules at all. Poirot, who had not read the Greek myths before, decides to rise to the challenge and undertake his own 12 labors. These labors are related in a linked series of short stories, each adventure is complete unto its self but most contain references to earlier stories in the arc. The stories are names after the origninal 12 labors and are:

The Nemean Lion - Poirot unmasks a dognapping gang
The Lernean Hydra - involves rumor, murder and a love triangle
The Arcadian Deer - young love sends Poirot on a long quest
The Ermanthian Boar - Poirot captures a crime lord
The Augean Stables - Poirot clears political intrigue and scandal
The Stymphalean Birds - Poirot halts a blackmail scheme
The Cretan Bull - Poirot unearths an old scandal to stop a crime
The Horses of Diomedes - Poirot breaks up a drug ring
The Girdle of Hyppolita - Poirot finds a missing art treasure
The Flock of Geryon - Poirot stops a religious conman
The Apples of the Hesperides - Poirot locates a missing treasure
The Capture of Cerberus - Poirot enters Hell for an old friend

The stories are all Christie gems, usually leading the reader astray and ending with a surprise twist. It is also amusing to see the Poirot interpretation of the labors, the lion becomes a Pekinese dog, the harpies harmless old women etc. This is a good book to take on a trip, the short story format lends itself to reading in interrupted spurts.

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4.0 out of 5 stars enjoyable take on greek mythology, Mar 26 2003
By JR (New York) - See all my reviews
Creative, ingenious but farfetched; still - some of Agatha's more detailed, colorful stories. (Farfetched only in that Poirot wants to retire after 12 cases and miraculously finds 12 in which to do so.) Miss Canaby in the first tale reappears in the Flock of Geryon, which later on: became the basis for a longer version in the novel The Pale Horse. (Some elements are nearly the same in short story and novel form.) The Erymanthanian Boar is set in a remote ski lodge on top of a tall mountain, which was the same location as the 1960's film version of Christie's Ten Little Indians. The writers even used the broken tramcar premise in the screenplay, perhaps inspired by or lifted from this piece. It's one of Poirot's more violent cases. Finally, The Learnean Hydra is almost an exact duplicate of the story the Cornish Mystery from the Underdog collection of stories, proving that maybe Christie might have written way too much in her long career, or simply liked to expand on her previous works. She was more prolific in her day than Danielle Steele is in this one.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Destroying modern monsters, Mar 17 2002
By Michele L. Worley (Kingdom of the Mouse, United States) - See all my reviews
If you're interested in an unabridged audio version, the Raymond Massey recording is excellent, although it omits both the prologue and the last paragraph or so of the final adventure. In the prologue, Poirot plans, as an artistic finale to his career, to take 12 last cases - no more - in imitation of the Labours of Hercules, before retiring to grow vegetable marrows. (He even followed through - see _The Murder of Roger Ackroyd_ for Poirot in retirement.)

"The Nemean Lion" - Poirot dreamed of a really grand case for his first labour - but the excellent Miss Lemon has recommended a man who wants Poirot to investigate the disappearance of his wife's Pekinese dog. Alas, it has one unusual feature that makes Poirot curious...This case is mentioned occasionally in later years (e.g. in _Hickory Dickory Dock_), though not by name.

"The Lernean Hydra" - The many-headed monster, in this case, is the rumour that Dr. Oldfield poisoned his wife to be free to marry his assistant. Poirot begins by asking Miss Moncrieffe to introduce him to the biggest gossip in the village. Stripped of its trimmings, this case has the same core situation as the Marple story _The Blue Geranium_.

"The Arcadian Deer" - When Poirot's hired car breaks down in the snow, Ted Williamson (a young mechanic with the face of a Greek god), approaches him, and asks him to find Nita, a pretty girl met by chance and never seen again. As lady's maid to a Russian dancer then staying with Sir George, she might be in a jam, considering the crowd that Sir George runs with...

"The Erymanthian Boar" - His last case having brought him to Switzerland, Poirot receives a note from an old friend who's trying to capture alive the killer Marrascaud - a man with a wild pig's soul.

"The Augean Stables" - The Prime Minister, Edward Ferrier, and his party forced Ferrier's father-in-law to retire when they uncovered his fiduciary misconduct - now they're asking Poirot for a miracle: to clean up the mess and avert a scandal that would destroy the party, now that _The X-Ray News_ has ferreted out the story.

"The Stymphalean Birds" - Harold Waring, a rising young politician on holiday, feels uneasy about the two harpy-like spinsters at his hotel. But who are the real monsters who feed on human misery? (Poirot enters rather late in the story to sort things out.)

"The Cretan Bull" - Hugh Chandler broke his engagement to Diana Maberly's engagement, fearing that he's inherited the streak of insanity that runs in his father's family. He left the Navy, but now he seems unsafe even for life in the country. So Poirot goes to see this young bull, once dedicated to Poseidon, when Diana insists that he can't be crazy.

"The Horses of Diomedes" - The wild horses that eat human flesh - in this case, a ring of cocaine smugglers. Young doctor Stoddart puts him onto some of the recipients, having been called in to tend the wreckage from a particularly wild party.

"The Girdle of Hyppolita" - In this case, a stolen work of that name by Rubens introduces Poirot to the case of a missing schoolgirl, which interests him very much indeed. (A tribe of modern Amazons, indeed.) She disappeared off the school train to France, just before arriving for her first term, leaving no trace. (If you want to see how Christie's mastery of her art, especially character development, improved over time, compare this with the much earlier "Case of the Kidnapped Prime Minister". Here she makes us *care* about what happened to the victim.)

"The Flock of Geryon" - Miss Amy Carnaby (former companion to Lady Hoggin in the first labour) has come to Poirot, seeking help for Mrs. Clegg, a widowed friend who has joined a cult - the Flock of the Shepherd. Several wealthy women have died after leaving all their money to the Cause...

"The Apples of the Hesperides" - Emery Power, a great financial force and a collector of historical works of art, believed for 10 years that Sir Reuben Rosenthal engineered the theft of his newly-purchased Cellini goblet (a gold cup, decorated with a serpent-and-apple tree motif, which once belonged to the Borgias). But Sir Reuben, now a business ally, didn't do it - so Power hires Poirot to recover the cup. ("If the affair were easy, it would not have been necessary to send for you.")

"The Capture of Cerberus" - Poirot sees Countess Rossakoff in a crowd on the Underground, and calls out, asking where he can find her. "In Hell!" And upon asking Miss Lemon what she would do if a friend said that, Miss Lemon replies, "I should ring up for a table." (!) So we meet the Countess in London's most fashionable nightclub, and of course, adventure follows in her wake.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Hercules lives again!
Imagine- you have the strength of many men, you are famous for your feats, and you're a short Belgian detective named Hercule Poirot. Read more
Published on Nov 28 2001 by David Healy

4.0 out of 5 stars The Labors of Hercules Review
This work of Agatha Christie appears to be the final chapter of the mysteries of Hercule Poirot, the main character and investigator. Read more
Published on April 29 2001 by Austin Ramme

5.0 out of 5 stars Ingenious Christie work
Agatha Christie came up with some pretty unusual premises for her mysteries and this one is no exception. Read more
Published on Jun 26 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars A fun read.
As a novice to the mystery genre, I very much liked this book. Although there is an attempt to form a continuing thread throughout the chapters of this book, it is really just 12... Read more
Published on May 30 2000 by dchung

5.0 out of 5 stars 12 wonderful short-story murder mysteries
I liked this book because while it's a collection of short stories, it is also a long story featuring Herclue Poirot. Read more
Published on April 8 1999

3.0 out of 5 stars Pretty good, very good characterization
This is a pretty good book. It introduced some new characters that I liked, for example, Amy Carnaby, who I wished would be in more of Poirot's books, and brought up old... Read more
Published on Feb 2 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars Poor short stories
It's incredible how she insisted on making this kind of books. They don't even may be called a book. When it starts to call your attention the story finishes. Read more
Published on Jul 18 1998

4.0 out of 5 stars PRETTY GOOD...
Although I would not say that this is her best work, Christie does some clever and unexpected plot twists. Read more
Published on Jun 22 1998

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