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They Came to Baghdad - Audio

They Came to Baghdad - Audio

List Price: $11.14
Your Price: $8.36
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not your run-of-the-mill Agatha Christie...
Review: "They Came To Baghdad" is, to me, very different from the many Agatha Christie books that I've read. Different - yes, but bad? No! I'm not about to spoil the terrific, tension-mounting plot, but the mystery (all of her books are mysteries; this one is no different in that respect) involves spies, both good and bad, leakage, intrigue...no shocking murders in quiet English towns here, folks.

Our leading lady is Victoria Jones, shorthand typist and incorrigible liar, her "fertile brain" is ever-ready for cooking up believable stories and she can twist "little indiarubber face" into a remarkable imitation of any person. It's refreshing that she's not pretty; so many heroines have that as well as wit and kindness! Her habit of telling lies draws her into an incredible web of adventure, romance (well, not really...) and danger. A worthy read for anyone that likes a good mystery!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Improbable Plot, Incredible Situations, But Entertaining
Review: Agatha Christie appears to be harkening back to her earlier "young girl as adventuress" theme in this novel which centers around Victoria Jones, a protagonist who specializes in mimicry and lies. The combination gets her in endless trouble.

The story begins when she meets an attractive young man named Edward in FitzJames Gardens one afternoon. They have an immediate bonding, but Edward is scheduled to leave very soon for Baghdad in connection with his job with a cultural arts group called The Olive Branch. Not one to be easily discouraged, Victoria sets about finding a position that will allow her to follow Edward to Baghdad. Her search for him in this colorful city involves her with many suspicious characters, a badly wounded man who dies in her hotel room, and a great look at an archaeological dig, a particular specialty of Mrs. Christie's.

It is all wildly incredible, definitely improbable, but still an entertaining work with many likeable and well-drawn characters.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Improbable Plot, Incredible Situations, But Entertaining
Review: Agatha Christie appears to be harkening back to her earlier "young girl as adventuress" theme in this novel which centers around Victoria Jones, a protagonist who specializes in mimicry and lies. The combination gets her in endless trouble.

The story begins when she meets an attractive young man named Edward in FitzJames Gardens one afternoon. They have an immediate bonding, but Edward is scheduled to leave very soon for Baghdad in connection with his job with a cultural arts group called The Olive Branch. Not one to be easily discouraged, Victoria sets about finding a position that will allow her to follow Edward to Baghdad. Her search for him in this colorful city involves her with many suspicious characters, a badly wounded man who dies in her hotel room, and a great look at an archaeological dig, a particular specialty of Mrs. Christie's.

It is all wildly incredible, definitely improbable, but still an entertaining work with many likeable and well-drawn characters.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Hmm
Review: For me, this book was somewhat of a disappointment, perhaps because, right before it, I had read And Then There Were None, which I thought was much better. However, that is not to say that this book was bad. It has plenty of humor(something that's hard to find in books where people get killed), and an amazing heroine. It is, though, farflung and a bit confusing.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Shaky plotting, terrific atmosphere
Review: I first read this book several years ago and have subsequently revisited it many times, not so much for the story which is inconsistent at best, but for the great atmosphere. In her real life, Christie had traveled extensively in the Middle East with her archeologist husband Sir Max Mallowan and her knowledge of this region enables her to paint a fascinating portrait of Baghdad. She also successfully captures a real sense of evil that has to be defeated at all costs that makes the story gripping. But the actual plot is pretty implausible - world domination from some remote area of the world? I looked up my atlas and still couldn't identify which part of the world she meant! Also, isn't it a little unrealistic that an untrained Englishwoman could just blunder her way to success when skilled spies failed? Still, I would recommend the book just for its amazing ambience and not focus so much on the story.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Fun surprise!
Review: I thought I'd read all Agatha Christie's books before I was twenty. I was delighted to find this book, one I'd missed, and even more delighted to read it. I am a seasoned veteran of mystery novels, and this one made me exclaim out loud, more than once, at the end.

Maybe not her best work (but then again...) -- definitely not one to be missed.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: ...And who in the WORLD is Anna Scheele?!
Review: I thought this book was extremely entertaining (although I had a bit of trouble keeping up with all the twists and turns)and somewhat in the style of "Passenger to Frankfurt," albeit not quite. Whereas "Passenger to Frankfurt" had the same basic theme of a someone with an oversize ego trying to rule the world, I'd say that Sir Stafford Nye is just a little more...stable than Victoria Jones, in whom I see just a hint of young Tuppence. "They came to Baghdad" also manages to be more lighthearted for just this reason. It also gives us a glimpse of the Middle East, and especially Iraq, before Saddam and friends. Anyway, read the book, and if you disagree with anything I said please don't tell anyone.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A spy thriller genre set in the style of a children¿s book
Review: In a theme similar to some of her other works, namely the Big Four, the Secret Adversary, Destination Unknown and Seven Dials Mystery, Agatha Christie moved away from familiar settings of a murder/crime investigation within a confined setting to the global stage for an international conspiracy that sought to manipulate the 2 world powers in 1950. Such conspiracies were the favourite of writers like Robert Ludlum, fleshed out with all the dirt, cynicism and playing hardball, gratuouis sex and violence and profanity liberally sprinkled.

Fortunately, or unfortunately, Christie's descriptions tend to be milder, child-like (or childish if you prefer) even. Bringing out a theme which she used a few times in other similar novels, the writer sought to try her hand into the realm of grand-scale conspiracy, extensive penetration of government officers by spies, huge amount of money movement camouflaged in indescripherable financial transaction, and missing scientists brought to a secret remote base far from civilisation.

The readers were treated to a prologue scene where a couple of British agents were worried about a conference among the Great Powers to be conducted in Baghdad soon. Their man who had on a rumour gone off in pursuit of evidence of the conspiracy was on the way back but the path is hindered by people who sought to silence him and the evidence at all costs.

The scene officially opened with Victoria Jones, orphaned, typical working girl in a London office whose only escape from her dreary existence was inventing juicy tales, the type of juiciness that could only come from the subject being related to familiar characters, such as her boss. Thus when her boss returned early unexpectedly, Victoria Jones found herself shortly munching her lunch in FitzJames Garden, considering her externally imposed career revision.

Not the type of girl to let such things depress her, Victoria Jones found herself attracted to a man sitting nearby. Boldly introducing herself to him, Edward charmed her by the simplistic way he reflected on life, universe and everything, probably very much like what Wodehouse's Bertram Wooster would say in candid guiless moments. After Edward took a snapshot of her before rushing off back to his boss, letting out that he was bound for Baghdad the following day, it took Victoria Jones all of a minute or so before deciding she too would go to Baghdad, with her exchequer being of a respectable sum of five pounds, or so.

With the kind of serendipitous encounters that could only happen in the movies & PG Wodehouse, Victoria Jones made her way Baghdad, a comfortable trip, legal and all without stowing away like rats on a ship, and with just a bit of the madcap hare-brained (yet undeniably successful) schemes that PG Wodehouse put his poor heroines through. Victoria had to through becoming several different people before arriving in the Middle East and finding Edward. The encounters she had in her journey would serve to provide her with the information later she would need when she found herself involved in the BIG conspiracy.

For a change, her first involvement was not due to any of her doing. A man simply got into her room, begged for sanctuary like the room was the Church of Notre Dame in Paris, then most inconsiderately, died. A nearby British agent quickly assisted her through the crisis, and Victoria Jones found herself off in search for clues at the Olive Branch, a literary society where Edward was employed.

The mystery deepened when Victoria Jones was kidnapped at the arrangement of a colleague who was just as besotted with Edward. Though she was just an amateur blundering in the dark, Victoria showed herself no less resourceful by escaping, taking on more identities before returning to the Baghdad.

Readers can't help but admire her quick-thinking and acting skills when she finally discovered that the truth was ...

For its merits, readers would have to consider this book as being about Victoria Jones and how she handled herself through sticky situations, instead of viewing this as a mystery or a thriller.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Christie's Atmospheric Masterpiece
Review: In this 1951 novel, more relevant today than in its own time, Christie shows her remarkable talent for spinning a web of characters that, ultimately, entangles and engulfs the reader like none other of her 80 odd titles. Flawless plot and intriguing characters are only side dishes to the staggering atmosphere the reader takes from this book's pages. By the story's end you smell, see, feel, and hear every molecule the characters experience - and it's more than you wish! The story is deep and the characters numerous, but the outcome is intoxicating. A must read for mention into the Middle-Eastern havoc of the early 22nd century our society is now attentive to. The vast aroma of the Middle East never seemed so invigorating as when you are on the loose with one of the many fast paced members of this elite plot. Breathtaking description, enough to guide but little enough to let the reader invent, sets you down running into a maze of panic and frenzy. (so far, my all-time fav. work of fiction)

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A Disappointment From Agatha Christie
Review: The plot of this book is the most outrageous and prepsoterious thing Chrisite ever thought of. It is meant to be a thriller of some sort rather than a straight forward mystery. The characters' actions are not justified and the plot is very vague. The reader just dosen't get captivated or intrested in the story and you could care less what happens to Victoria Jones, the airhead lead character. A few events that are a bit intriguing dosen't help much and by the end, the book is just a big mess. Skip this one, Pick Up "And Then There Were None" If you want a suspence/thriller book by Agatha Christie.


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