

The beautiful Veronica Cray, an old flame of Christow's, suddenly appears in the house on Saturday night to borrow a box of matches. John Christow is carrying on an affair with Henrietta Savernake, a talented sculptor. The eccentric Lucy Angkatell has invited the Christows, along with other members of her extended family, to her estate for the weekend. When the death card is drawn, he pays no attention, but the appearance of an old flame at The Hollow seems to be the final link in a chain of fatal circumstances. On the morning that he and his downtrodden wife, Gerda, are due to travel down to the country to weekend with friends, Christow allows his little daughter to tell his fortune with cards. Plot Introduction ĭr John Christow is a successful physician and leading researcher, although very tired and irritated by his current life. Francis Loftus Sullivan was an English film and stage actor who portrayed Hercule Poirot in the plays Black Coffee (1930) and Peril at End House (1932) and also played the lead in The Witness for the Prosecution (1953), for which he won a Tony Award in 1955. However, the setting for The Hollow was inspired by Francis L. Īgatha Christie's successful career foresaw the use of her eight owned houses as settings for her novels, which were Taken at the Flood, Dead Man's Folly, Five Little Pigs, A Pocket Full of Rye, and Crooked House. His late arrival, jarring, given the established atmosphere, led her to claim in her Autobiography that she ruined the novel by the introduction of Poirot.

Agatha Christie, who often admitted that she did not like Poirot (a fact parodied by her recurring novelist character Ariadne Oliver), particularly disliked his appearance in this novel. The novel is an example of a "country house mystery" and was the first of her novels in four years to feature the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot-one of the longest gaps in the entire series. A paperback edition in the US by Dell Books in 1954 changed the title to Murder after Hours.

The US edition retailed at $2.50 and the UK edition at eight shillings and sixpence (8/6).

in 1946 and in the United Kingdom by the Collins Crime Club in November of the same year. The Hollow is a work of detective fiction by British writer Agatha Christie, first published in the United States by Dodd, Mead & Co.
