The second George Smiley novel is an offbeat curio in the series and a damn good one at that. A unique entry because it isn’t a spy novel at all but rather an old-fashioned detective mystery along the lines of Agatha Christie or Dorothy L. Sayers. Later, more celebrated Smiley adventures certainly have mystery elements sprinkled in (as Smiley investigates a mole within the Circus Spy agency) but A Murder of Quality operates outside the espionage community altogether. Plot: Miss Brimley is an old friend of George Smiley (from his WWII exploits) and when she receives a letter from a woman named Stella Rode, who claims her husband is trying to kill her, Brimley seeks Smiley’s counsel. Unfortunately, though, it’s too late. Read the rest of my article at Criminal Element.
To some extent, I forgot about Unsolved Mysteries, which ran from 1987 to 2002, hosted by Robert Stack. It reminded me a lot of In Search Of with its documentary style format and emphasis on unsolved crimes, unexplained phenomena and missing persons. Also highlighted were mysterious legends. I recently ran across the case of Agatha Christie’s disappearance in 1926:
Also, If you get a chance check out the 1979 film Agatha starring Vanessa Redgrave as Christie and Timothy Dalton as her husband. The film is a fictionalized account of her disappearance and though uneven is entertaining.