45 older women by employing hobbies like gardening and birdwatching as ways to observe others and gather information. Another activity that Miss Marple partakes in during her first novel is going to tea with the other village ladies, allowing her to have
an established social life, while also allowing her access to the female gossip network in St. Mary Mead. In Gender and Detective Literature The Role of Miss Marple in Agatha Christie’s
The Body in the Library,” Berna Köseoğlu states that this village life enables Marple to become closer to her community Thus, it should be emphasized that her being a member of the society illustrated in
Christie’s novels, is also of great importance and strengthens her ability to reveal the criminals. Since she comes from the village and belongs to the setting in which
the crime has been committed, she can seethe inner world of the ordinary characters, their lifestyle and their typical characteristics (133). Specifically in
The Body in the Library, Marple’s social integration pays off. Although the murder that has happened
did not occur in her village, that does not prevent Marple from being a fish out of water, as the police officer assigned to the case imagines. In fact, Inspector Slack, without realizing it, hits on the reason Marple can be successful no matter the setting
of the crime when he says, The old lady knows everything that goes on in the village, that’s true enough (565). This has given Miss Marple the skills to solve crimes anywhere, For Miss Marple had attained fame by her ability to linkup trivial village happenings with graver problems in such away as to throw light upon the latter (
The Body in the Library 565).
Such is evident in A Caribbean Mystery where she admits to herself, and many of the persons with who she had conversed here had had regrettable resemblances to certain persons at St. Mary Mead, and where did that lead you (246). Living in and acquiring knowledge
of her small Victorian 46 village only helps Miss Marple conduct criminal investigations in environments more foreign to her. It can be argued that she is able to do this because human nature is the same no matter the location, and as Miss Marple would conclude, she can distrust people in her village just as much as those people in the Caribbean. Marple’s keen sense of observation of village life translates into her keen sense of observation in any setting.
Share with your friends: