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The Murder of Roger Ackroyd

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The Murder of Roger Ackroyd (1926) is a detective novel by Agatha Christie. The book, set in the fictional village of King's Abbott in England, features the detective Hercule Poirot.

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The story is told in the first person by Dr James Sheppard. It begins with the death of Mrs. Ferrars, a wealthy widow who is rumored to have murdered her husband. Her death is initially believed to be suicide until Roger Ackroyd, a widower who had been expected to marry Mrs Ferrars, dies. The suspects include Ackroyd's niece, Flora, Major Blunt, a big-game hunter, Geoffrey Raymond, Ackroyd's secretary, Ralph Paton, an adopted son with gambling debts, and Parker, a snooping butler.

Warning (yet again): Wikipedia contains spoilers

The book is most notable for its surprise ending in which it is revealed that the narrator is the murderer:

I am rather pleased with myself as a writer. What could be neater, for instance, than the following: "The letters were brought in at twenty minutes to nine. It was just ten minutes to nine when I left him, the letter still unread. I hesitated with my hand on the door handle, looking back and wondering if there was anything I had left undone."

Edmund Wilson alludes to this novel in the title of his well-known attack on detective fiction, "Who Cares Who Killed Roger Ackroyd?" Pierre Bayard's book Who killed Roger Ackroyd? (2000) (ISBN 1-56584-677-X) argues that Poirot actually got the solution wrong and proposes an alternate solution.