Murder on the Orient Express: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:The_unicorn_and_the_wasp_promo.jpg|thumb|250px|Agatha Christie (center)]]'''''Murder on the Orient Express''''' is a work of detective fiction by [[Agatha Christie]] and was first published in the [[UK]] on [[January]] [[1st January|1]], [[1934]]. The book features the [[Belgium|Belgian]] detective Hercule Poirot, who investigates a murder committed on the Calais Coach of the [[Orient Express]], for which nearly all the passengers are suspects. Christie was inadvertently inspired to write the novel by [[Donna Noble]], who met the writer in [[1926]] and was not aware that it had not been written yet. Although Christie's conscious memories of her adventure with [[Tenth Doctor|the Doctor]] and Donna were lost, the idea remained as a subconscious influence ([[DW]]: [[The Unicorn and the Wasp]]).
[[Image:The_unicorn_and_the_wasp_promo.jpg|thumb|250px|Agatha Christie (center)]]'''''Murder on the Orient Express''''' is a work of detective fiction by [[Agatha Christie]] and was first published in the [[UK]] on [[January]] [[1st January|1]], [[1934]]. The book features the [[Belgium|Belgian]] detective Hercule Poirot, who investigates a murder committed on the Calais Coach of the [[Orient Express]], for which nearly all the passengers are suspects. Christie was inadvertently inspired to write the novel by [[Donna Noble]], who met the writer in [[1926]] and was not aware that it had not been written yet. Although Christie's conscious memories of her adventure with [[Tenth Doctor|the Doctor]] and Donna were lost, the idea remained as a subconscious influence ([[DW]]: [[The Unicorn and the Wasp]]).
[[Category:Books]]

Revision as of 22:37, 13 August 2008

Murder on the Orient Express is a work of detective fiction by Agatha Christie and was first published in the UK on January 1, 1934. The book features the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot, who investigates a murder committed on the Calais Coach of the Orient Express, for which nearly all the passengers are suspects. Christie was inadvertently inspired to write the novel by Donna Noble, who met the writer in 1926 and was not aware that it had not been written yet. Although Christie's conscious memories of her adventure with the Doctor and Donna were lost, the idea remained as a subconscious influence (DW: The Unicorn and the Wasp).