Poge Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 12, 197:5 BOO KS Agatha Christie: Thrilling close for sleuth Poirot CURTAIN by Agatha Christie. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company 260 pp., $7.95. . By DEBRA IHURWITZ THERE MUST BE a pattern which, once found, would enable an Agatha Christie read- er to crack the hard nut which is a murder case and discover' the truth at its cores, The deli- cious frustration is however, that no such pattern can be found. Agatha Christie has writ- ten eighty - five books during her long tenure as the Grande Dame of mystery fiction, and though I have read every one I could get my hands on - which is most of them - any pattern continues to elude me. Curtain is Christie's latest publication, though it was writ- ten in the 1940's. Since she so brilliantly occupied so manyI hours of my adolescence, I find it difficult to criticize Dame Ag- atha; nevertheless, with the ex- ception of Nemesis, the mys- teries she has written since 1970 have simply not been up to snuff. The cases have been just as hard to crack, and the reso- lutions just as neat, but the stories themselves have not been as stylistically tight, as skilfully drawn or as interesting as the bulk of Christie's earlier, work. Afficionadoes may, well ask how anything can measure up to the fascinating twists and turns of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, the gripping, page- turning tension of And Then There' Were None or the, in- credibly complex resolution of The A.B.C. Murders. While from a contextual point of view, Curtain is not quite another of these all-time greats, it will no doubt stand with them by virtue 1of the uniqueness of its content. Curtain is, of course, the work in which Christie polishes off Hercule Poirot, her very fa- mous and very eggheaded Bel- gian detective. She intended to have thebook published post- humously, presumably in order to forestall any attempts on the parts of other mystery writers to take up M. Poirot's adven- tures where she was forced to leave them off. Happily, she de- cided to publish it sooner: though it would have been worth the wait, I for one .am very glad to have it now.. With such a history, any book would be hard-pressed to dis- appoint such an avid reader. Sure enough, I found Curtain thrilling. The scene is set at Styles St. Mary, the scene of Christie's first Poirot mystery, written fifty-five years ago. M. Poirot, we read, is again a guest at Styles Court, but the is woven; the tension mounts. country house of The Mysteri- Though the seasoned Christie' ous Affair at Styles has become reader will immediately pick up a partitioned guest house in small clues, half-sentences and Curtain. Indeed, the theme of ideas which smack of import- change, of time passing, per- -ance by virtue of their very meates this mystery; it is play- insignificance, the climax de- ed off against a counter-theme fies precognition. I deduced half, of the essential sameness of the answer, but like most read- things. Once again, we find ers I had to be told, along with; Poirot at Styles on the trail of a killer, and though time has altered nearly everything in one way or another, the little detec- tive's life has come full-circle. He is back to finish his career where he began it so many years ago: Poirot has sent for Captain Hastings, who for me has al- ways brought to mind the erst- while, lovable, but decidedly dense Watson of Sherlock Holmes fame. Hastings arrives at Styles Court amidst a passel< .of old memories which are mixed with the all - too - sad experiences of his recent life. The captain finds his Belgian friend in a sorry state: Poirot poor Hastings, what was what inX is aged and arthritic, confined the end. to a wheelchair, without even Of course once I knew "who the ministrations of the faithful dunit" I was able to see how Georges (for the valet has been carefully Christie had written called away to attend to his ill Curtain. As in Roger AckroydI father). Nevertheless, despite or The A.B.C. Murders, little in his physical decrepitude, Poi- Curtain is extraneous. Natur-I rot's notorious grey cells are as ally, there is a red-herring or active as ever; *as Poirot re- two, but nothing which does notI marks: "My rule, remember, lead meaningfullyvto the resolu- matic, explicable, and plausi- ble ones and - damn it! - they ought to be deducible. Apart from its structural ex- cellence, Curtain will take its place as one of the foremost among Christie's mysteries be- cause it represents the end of a legend. I must confess to some tears for M. Poirot; Christie has described his finish with pathos, humor, and a great deal of sympathy. Though Poirot had, to die, he had the good fortune to die with a flourish, gray cells once more, and finally, trium- phant over the forces of mur- der. MYSTERY NOVELS ARE pe- culiar in that they are one- time experiences. There is little pleasure in rereading a mys- tery: upon second reading, the reader is omniscient and the so- 1tion seems banally obvious. Thus, the demise of Hercule Poi- rot signifies the demise of a great pleasure for me and any other intemperate Christie read- ers who have seized and devour- ed al ithe Poirot mysteries with no thoughts to the future. Cur- tain is tinged with a sadness, finally, which the other Poirot mysteries lack; as Poirot would have said, "It is, you compre- hend, the end. La fin, mon ami." Debra Hurwitz is the Daily's Assistant Editorial Director. I 's "{ i i ij .( :j WIND POWER SAILBOATS & ICEBOATS FALL DISCOUNTS Featuring: * SUNFLOWER * BANSHEE-Winner of Yachting OAK Regetta t SKIMMER 45 * SNOWBI RD All boats easily cartopped XMAS & SPRING LAYAWAYS WINDWARD 'SAIL CALL 971-5155 Open Eves. Sat. & Sun. . . ::: : -}-a-t has alwaysdbeen the same - tion is incorporated into the sit back and think. That I can body of thetnovel. I remain thing possible to me." despite my own inability to per- present in Curtain. One by one, markably fit culmination to the I the guests at Styles are intro- mystery. Christie has no unfair I duced, each touched by at least tricks up her sleeve, no secret one sinister stroke. Line by line, trap-doors, no invisible wires; episode by episode, the tapestry her resolutions are very prag- THE CHO AME AUDITIONS for UAC Children's Kidn ' Theatre Production of illus. FREE TO BE YOU AND ME TAK (based on the TV presentation with Mario Thomas) nic Sta Tues., Oct. 14 Wed., Oct. 15 Build gell H- 7:30-9:30 2040 Frieze Bldg. look Please come prepared with a song ents1 FURTHER INFO. 763-1 107 down door, the U stroll through American architecture II ou ever wantfed to know--an more ARCHITECTURE OF ICE: ECLECTICISM IN ERICA 1880-1930 Walter C. ey (New York: George iller, Inc., 1974), 178 pp., . $4.95. By TOM ELLIOT KE A HALF hour the next' ce day. nd on the steps of the LS&A ing and look across at An- Hall. Cross State Street and back. Walk around Clem- Library, go inside and sit for five minutes; go next and do the same thing at1 JGLI. Then go over to the Quad, walk around the in- and go diagonally across treet to the Business Ad- tration Building. at you will have been do- s experiencing, in capsule the difference between ar- :tural eclecticism and mod- m, between buildings ed in the styles of past eras buildings which avoid all rical reference and try in- to express structure and ion in their. exteriors. MO)DERNISM - admittedly, a What Walter Kidney does in "Eclecticism today," Kidney fuzzy term - has been dom- The Architecture of Choice is to says, "is like a person who has inant for so long now that, if survey that fifty years of Amer- almost lived down an ancient we bother to think about it at ican e c 1 e c t i c architecture, scandal, a person whose crime all, our natural assumption is sketch the careers of some of was once exposed, but who is that buildings ought to express the major practitoners, discuss now regarded merely as old and plainly what their function is the appeal and uses of specific harmless, if not quite respect- and what are the materials and styles, and speculate, though not able." construction systems with which extensively, on possible causes The Architecture of Choice at- they are built. Putting it less of the eclectic phenomenon as a tempts to lead us away from precisely, but probably in the ! whole. In short, he treats eclec- this attitude of mixed contempt terms most of us use, buildings I ticism as a phase of American and amusement toward not only built in. the present ought to| architecture worth taking sera- an understanding of the history look new. ously and considering on its own of eclecticism but also toward ! terms. . an appreciation, of the appeal Onnenthat ityhadiforrAmericans.QIt Consequentiy, the use of ns- toric styles and forms in build- ing - eclecticism - seems a bi- zarreaberration of our grand- parents. After all, why should a 20th century law library look like a Gothic cathedral? that it had for Americans. It QUCH AN approach may not was, Kidney points out, an ar- seem very remarkable, but chitecture in which "the human until fairly recently it would not factor was involved most con- F° -, * a _a * QI *{7 s-sVf ! " "t& Lr t "o OQWeJ- civct;LA i The University of Michigan School of Music Faculty Chramber Concerts SECOND PROGRAM ELIZABETH MOSHER, soprano JOHN McCOLLUM, tenor JAMES DAPOGNY, piano ROSEMARY RUSSELL, mezzo-soprano JOHN MOHLER, clarinet NANCY HODGE, harpsichord CHARLES OWEN, percussion ASSOCIATES: Kirk Toth, Marianne Toth, violin; Susan Robinson, viola; Linda Richter, Younq-Sook Yun, cello; John Hood, continuo SUNDAY, OCT. 19, at 4:00 p.m. RACKHAM AUDITORIUM Teleman, Ellis, J.S. Bach "Jelly Roll" Morton ADMISSION COMPLIMENTARY Law side the s minis Wht ing is form, chitec ernisr clothe and histor stead functi But Americans must have felt there was some reason, since in the fifty years or so before the Depression very little building was done which wasn't eclectic, which didn't suggest Greece, Rome, the Middle Ages, Tudor houses, Spanish missions, or a. multitude of other historic pre- cedents, either singly or in com- binations. - -.~--~-- -. --- I We are beginning to understand t h a t modernism is no guarantee of archi- tectural desirability. Pure and honest ex- pression of structure and function c a n produce buildings which are ugly (UGLI) a n d ineffi- cient. - {.. S s 4 Ii -~ m *0~ U 4 Don't Let The U Screw You Again! SGC is interviewing for ACRICS (Athletic-Advisory Committee on Recreation Intramurals Club-Sports) Interviews will be held for 2 Student Positions MONDAY, OCT. 13th Stop by the 3RD FLOOR OF THE UNION for an application and more information. West Side Book Shop Fine Used, Rare and Out-of-Print Books Bought and Sold " MODERN FIRSTS * AMERICAN INDIANS * POETRY e MUSIC e AMERICANA a OCCULT 113 W. Liberty-995-1891 MON.-SAT.: 111:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. THURS., FRI. NITES TILL 9:00 P.M. FIND BIG SAVINGS AT THE VAULT have been taken at all by any- one wishing to avoid a scholar- hy reputation as a crank or a fool. Kidney reminds us that, like other forms of history, architec- tural history is written by the victors, and the victory of mod- ernism over eclecticism in the 20's and 30's was full of hard feelings, many of which have carried over into more recent scholarship. No one today is as vituperative as the architect Louis Sullivan, who in 1922 re- ferred to one building as "a lewd exhibit of drooling imbecil- ity and political debauchery," but eclecticism is stll looked on, for the most part, as shallow and insignificant at best and dis- honest and immoral at worst. spicuously, one whose works are beyond a certain point incom- prehensible without understand- ing and lending sympathy to an earlier generation, its society, DEC.RADS: To attend Commence- ment, you must order a cap and gown, by Nov.14 at university cellar. and its attitudes." TIlIS BOOK, which, with only 70 pages of text, is intended to be more suggestive than ex- haustive, does not inquire very deeply into the nature of the society which embraced eclec- ticism - that, perhaps, requires a social as well as an architec- t'iral historian - but the sym- pathy he calls for is clearly there. He wants us to be inter- ested in the eclectics because they are artists and people worth knowing., To this end he provides some 150 illustrations of eclectic work, many of which are being made readily acces- sible for the first time. Kidney is a publicist in this book, but not a polemicist. He wants us to appreciate the real merits of eclecticism, but he is as aware as any modernist of its excesses; he tells us, for ex- ample, of the stone steps at Yale which were mechanically ground down to simulate great age. He is not calling for, nor does he seriously expect, a great resurgence of eclecticism. Furthermore, there was al- ways a certain amount of over- lap between eclecticism and modernism. Kidney briefly dis- cusses the example of the De- troit architect Albert Kahn, who is best known for his modernist industrial work; but who also did a number of Eclectic build- ings, including Clements Li- brary. PUT WHY IS all this import- ant? Isn't this simply an ab- stract, academic argument? Ec- lecticism, modernism - what's the big deal? We live our lives surrounded by architecture. The buildings in the little tour I suggested are not strange and exotic. You probably see most of them and go in and out of some every day. And the buildings we live in do affect our lives: you feel differ- ently inside Clements Library than you do inside the UGLI, and it isn't just the chairs. We are beginning to under- stand that modernism is no guarantee of desirability. Pure and honest expression of struc- ture and function can produce buildings which are ugly (UGLI) M and inefficient: ask an engineer about heat loss from glass sky- scrapers. O IT MIGHT be wise to set aside our modernist precon- ceptions about the inherent d:s- honesty of using historical styles and try to see the strengths of eclectic architecture. If ve have to make decisions about what SAVE STEPS MONEY TIME DRIVE IN-DRIVE STRAIGHT THRU CHO tSE FROM OUR WIDE SELECTION OF ICE COLD BEER and WINE- Domestic & Imported Champagne - Keg Beer - Cold Pop Ice--Crushed, Cubed or Block All From the Safety and Convenience of Your Car FOR THE ECOLOGY MINDED . . We Accept Returnable Bottles -OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK- CORNER OF FIFTH AND CATHERINE t"1rx++Mlx "+.M~x. . FREDERICK WISEMAN'S JUVENILE COURT A cinema verite look at the workings of a Juvenile Court by that great documentary maker, Frederick Wiseman, who is t+ft~ tte b.,{te , +a Its+a,, BEER ..1'.:,. t t'11 ! E , 13 A1 e