I first learned about Sherlock Holmes β yes, we will talk about Agatha Christie later. THIS IS IMPORTANT β when I was an elementary student. When I was still a kid, we had β and I guess we still have β this children magazine named βBOBOβ. Originated from the Netherlands, βBOBOβ magazine had such a long affection and connection to Indonesian children as it became part of our childhood. I remember I read Sherlock Holmesβ βThe Adventure of the Sussex Vampireβ, translated to Indonesian, in the magazine.
From there, I entered a wonderful world of detectives genre on literature.
As my admiration to Sherlock Holmes grew and as I learned more about the fictional detectives, I, too, learned about Agatha Christie and her famous Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple.
Unfortunately, it was an unsavoury experience as I found everything by Agatha Christie as βdullβ and βrambling.β I was used with Sir Arthur Conan Doyleβs fast-paced short-stories style, I couldnβt stand to read a whole novel of one single case.
I didnβt even bother to read Agatha Christieβs works until a couple of years ago (?) I saw βAnd Then There Were Noneβ on Netflix.
No. I didnβt watch it. I only saw the thumbnail on the Netflix app.
I watched it only for the first 10 minutes then I got too scared (Iβm serious.) Yet the curiosity started. What is this about this lady, Agatha Christie, that she could build such legacy with her detectives? Surely a proud Belgian man and a chatty elderly lady should do something extremely right that made the world fall in love with them?

Last week, we went to a bookstore in KL East after we had dinner in Cafe Chef Wan. The bookstoreβs name is βBookXcessβ (read: Book Excess.) This bookstore is the parent group of Big Bad Wolf Book Expo, a really famous book expo in Southeast Asia (mainly in Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia) for super cheap price. I kid you not, the price can be third or even quarter of the actual price.
Then I saw this Agatha Christie box set. Five novels: The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, Evil Under the Sun, The ABC Murders, The Five Little Pigs, and Murder on the Orient Express.
I took it without second thought. That, and because the price is not super exorbitant so my wallet can still breathe after my multiple stints with Neil Gaimanβs graphics novels and Kinokuniya Bookstore.

I decided to open my journey with a murder of a gentleman in a, supposedly, closed room: βThe Murder of Roger Ackroydβ
And I had to remind myself again and again, βthis is 1926. You do NOT yell, βWHAT DO YOU MEAN THE DICTAPHONE IS REALLY BIG? SONY HAS ONE THATβS SMALL ENOUGH FOR YOUR POCKETβ because for God sake, we have this thing called history of technology.β

Reading detective novel is fun. You found yourself trying to guess from the very first page. This man looks suspicious! Oh, this lady looks like she knows nothingβ but who knows? You tried to outsmart the author. You wished you could scoff and remarked, βHAH! I KNEW IT!β in such triumphant manner. You, a reader, able to guess whodunnit! Thatβs surely an achievement worth to brag about!
Then came βThe Murder of Roger Ackroydβ and when Hercule Poirot uttered the name of the killer, I found myself in Error 404 Not Found for five seconds.
βWait.
What.
What.β
Then a complete 5 minutes of, βare you kidding me, are you seriousβ WHAT,β and aggressively turned the pages again and again, from chapter one to the last chapter, tried to connect the dots, βdid I miss anything?β-panic, and ended up with a quiet realization followed with a final, β… Now I know why.β
I admire Agatha Christieβs way of portraying her characters, especially the women. I love how she breathed such variations on the women β they can be a schoolgirl dabbled in occultism or a naive temptress. I love how Agatha Christie able to give different perspectives and personalities on one single character β somebody that we thought using other people for their own expenses yet craved, and manipulated, by another (βEvil Under the Sunβ.)
Now, I keep turning the pages, craving for more.
Thank you for the magnificent works, Agatha Christie. My deepest apology, as it took me 36 years to recognize you.




















:)))) Samaaaa. Sekarang ga pake browsernya dulu, hahah