(no subject)
Dec. 29th, 2005 10:38 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Spoiler for a comment in smallship1's discussion of Agatha Christie.
The narrator is the murderer, and had originally planned his journal to be an account of his outwitting of the detective, rather than the confession it ends as. He omits to mention certain facts in his account, but does accurately represent what the detective had to work with (since he omits them both from his account to the detective and the reader).
The narrator is the murderer, and had originally planned his journal to be an account of his outwitting of the detective, rather than the confession it ends as. He omits to mention certain facts in his account, but does accurately represent what the detective had to work with (since he omits them both from his account to the detective and the reader).