The Christmas Pudding and a Selection of Entrees
Author: Agatha Christie
This collection of Agatha Christie short stories was published in the UK in 1960. It was not released in the US, but all of the stories appeared in other collections. This collection includes stories featuring Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple.
I have previously reviewed all of the Poirot stories as they were published in other short story collections.
The Mystery of the Spanish Chest appeared in The Regatta Mystery and other Stories as The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest. The Dream was also included in this same book. The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding is a re-working of two earlier stories, Christmas Adventure and Theft of the Royal Ruby. I read the original story as part of The Early Cases of Hercule Poirot, and read/reviewed Christmas Pudding at that time as well. Four and Twenty Blackbirds was included in Three Blind Mice and Other Stories. And, Underdog was published in The Underdog and Other Stories.
This collection includes:
The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding/Christmas Adventure
The Mystery of the Spanish Chest/The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest
The Underdog
Four and Twenty Blackbirds
The Dream
Greenshaw's Folly
The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding/Christmas Adventure: (from a prior review)
This tale was first published as Christmas Adventure in Sketch Magazine
on December 12, 1923. It was later re-published in an expanded short
novella form as The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding. The later
version expands the plot, changes character names, etc. I wanted to read
the original version of the story before delving into the longer 1960's
version....but it seems the original story has only been re-published
in one UK anthology, While the Light Lasts and Other Stories. In the US
this was published as The Harlequin Tea Set and Other stories.
BUT....the Harlequin Tea Set collection did not include Christmas
Adventure. So each time I search for the UK story collection, the search
pulls up Harlequin Tea Set instead.....
ARGH!!!
So I turned to my local library....found an anthology "The Early Cases
of Hercule Poirot" which includes all the early Poirot stories.
But.....instead of Christmas Adventure (the version published first in
1923)...it includes The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding. Foiled
again! So I turned to Amazon...they used to sell an ebook version of
Christmas Adventure published in 2014. It now says "unavailable.'' Tried
to find the ebook on a UK or Australian site.....all say unavailable.
So, it looks like I am going to have to read the revised, longer edition
of this story until I can get my hands on a copy of While The Light
Lasts and Other Stories. And so far, I have only been able to find
copies on Ebay.
Really??? LOL I even tried Internet Archive/Open Library. No luck there either.
So....I have put While the Light Lasts and Other Stories at the top of
my "must buy a used copy of this ASAP" list...and I'm having
pudding.....sigh. I will backtrack at a later date and read the original
story.
The basics: Poirot isn't too keen on spending Christmas at an English country house. But after the the promise of modern conveniences (such as radiators and central heating), good food, and a mystery to solve, he travels to Kings Lacey for an old fashioned English holiday......and a stolen ruby in the plum pudding.
I enjoyed this holiday tale immensely (despite its not being the original story). Poirot did some sleuthing, enjoyed the festivities, and in the end, he decided it was quite the enjoyable holiday. Cute story! Interesting mystery! :)
Adaptations:
This re-vamped story is also known as "The Theft of the Royal Ruby.'' It
was under this name that the television series Agatha Christie's Poirot
adapted the story for television (Season 3, Episode 8). While the story
is still delightful, I think the adaptation changed some of the best
parts of the story and some characters were expanded that may have been
better left as side notes. Still an enjoyable episode, but just not
quite the same as the original story.
I'm still very curious about the shorter, original version of this
story.... I will read and review it as soon as I have chased down a
copy. :)
The Mystery of the Spanish Chest/The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest: (from a prior review)
This tale was first published in magazines in the UK and US in 1932 as The Mystery of the Baghdad Chest.
The basics: The day after a party, a man is discovered dead in a rather large wooden chest in the very room where the party was held. Poirot is on the case to find the killer!
The original story was later lengthened into a novella and re-titled The Mystery of the Spanish Chest in 1960 (in three installments in a magazine). The novella first appeared in book format in this story collection.
Adaptations:
The television series Poirot adapted it as The Mystery of the Spanish Chest (Season 3, episode 8). The Poirot episode follows the basic plot with some changes to interject Poirot into the story sooner and to flesh the plot out into episode length. Inspector Japp and Captain Hastings are added into the mix as well. I enjoyed the episode. The plot followed the original story more than the expanded novella version. Very well done!
The Underdog: (from a prior review)
The Under Dog was first published in a US magazine in April 1926, and UK publication came later that same year. Its first appearance in book format came in 1929 when it was included in Two New Crime Stories in the UK. The second story in that book was by another author, E. Phillips Oppenheim (Blackman's Wood). In the US, it was later included in the short story collection The Underdog & Other Stories in 1951.
The Under Dog wasn't published in the UK again until this story collection in 1960.
I do not own a physical book that includes this story, so turned to my lovely local library and Hoopla for an audio version (HarperCollins, 2012, narrated by Hugh Fraser, 2 hrs).
The basics -- Sir Reuben Astwell is dead. Not a natural death, but he died as a result of being bashed over the head. His rather ill-tempered nephew has been arrested, but Sir Reuben's wife is adamant that the nephew didn't do it. Poirot steps in to find out the truth...... and, of course, does.
I like these Novella-length stories that are too short to be a novel, but long enough to really let the plot develop. It definitely gives that Christie twistiness time to develop. Family tensions. Servant tensions. Class tensions. Who bumped the old man off? And why? The audio version runs about 2 hours -- definitely long enough for Christie to build up the tension & then have the ultimate reveal.
Great story!
Adaptations:
Poirot - Season 5, Episode 2. There are a few minor changes to the story including adding in Hastings and Miss Lemon. But, this episode sticks pretty closely to the way it was originally written. Excellent as usual!
Christie really was a master of marketing. Publishing these early stories in magazines built up her name and talents, so that her books sold like hotcakes.
Four and Twenty Blackbirds: (from a prior review)
Hercule Poirot is the detective in this short story that first appeared in magazine format in 1940 (US) and 1941 (UK). It did not appear in book form until Three Blind Mice & Other Stories published in 1950.
The basics: Poirot investigates the death of a man who strayed from his usual cuisine and daily routine at a restaurant.
I found this study in behavior very interesting. At times I do enjoy to change my diet or habits up a bit....maybe a bit more spice, a special dish I've never had before, a different restaurant, etc. But if a person who has been a regular daily customer at a restaurant for 10 years suddenly completely goes off their "usual" choices and schedule, I can see how it would seem very odd, especially if they were ordering things they normally didn't like and not showing up for an extended period. Agatha Christie did a marvelous job of turning a situation like that into a interesting little mystery!
Adaptations:
Television: The long-running television Poirot adapted this story in 1989. [Season 1, episode 4] The episode makes some changes to extend the story into episode length and flesh out the plot a bit, but it sticks relatively close to the original story. The Japanese anime program, Agatha Christie's Great Detectives Poirot and Marple also had an episode in 2005 [episode 34].
I found no other adaptations of this story.
The Dream: (from a prior review)
This tale is another Agatha Christie short story that was first published in magazines. The Saturday Evening Post ran it in 1937 and it appeared in The Strand Magazine in the UK in 1938.
The basics: A man relates a strange dream to Poirot and later carries out the deed from the dream. Poirot investigates to find out if it was a dream.....or an elaborate plot.
I would love to see one of the old issues of The Strand! I'd love to see how these stories were presented, what advertisements were in the issues, and what other authors were featured!
Adaptations:
The only adaptation I found for this Hercule Poirot story is an episode of Poirot (Season 1, Episode 10). The plot for this story is definitely interesting! The Poirot episode was well done and followed the original story relatively closely. Some changes were made to fit the show and expand the plot to episode length.
Greenshaw's Folly:
The only story in this collection I didn't already review previously is Greenshaw's Folly, featuring Miss Marple.
Because I don't own a copy of this story collection, I had to go hunting digital resources through my local library. They had an ebook version of Greenshaw's Folly. (HarperCollins, 2013, 34 pages). Library to the rescue again!!
This short story was written in 1956 as a fundraiser to purchase a new stained glass window for a church. Originally Agatha wrote a Poirot story for the fundraiser (Greenshore Folly), but she had problems selling it. The story was too short to market as a novel but too long to sell to magazines. So, she wrote another story. Glad she did -- I loved reading this one!
The basics -- Old Miss Greenshaw lives in her family home, a very odd place built by her grandfather. The house is a huge monstrosity, featuring odd combinations of architecture styles. Just days after making a new will, the old woman is killed. Her manner of death is just as odd as the house. Miss Marple is on the case!
This story is entertaining, but very short. Miss Marple has the who, what and why figured out incredibly fast. Fun story!
Adaptations:
The television series Agatha Christie's Marple has an episode based on this story (Season 6, Episode 2) starring Julia McKenzie. The episode changes some elements of the story and mixes in plot points from another story, The Thumb Mark of Saint Peter. I'm sure they combined stories because Greenshaw's Folly is only a few pages long. The plot would have required a lot of padding to stretch it to episode length!
I very much enjoy the short stories Agatha Christie wrote, but the fact that some of them were re-titled, reworked, republished, re-everything'd so many times over the years can really can make trying to read them all a bit confusing at times!
I'm going to skip over any short story collections that only have stories I've already read and reviewed. This is the second time I've come across a book where I only needed to read one story!
On to the next!!




