84 pages • 2 hours read
Agatha ChristieA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Josephine is Sophia’s younger sister and Aristide’s granddaughter, a homely 12-year-old who is “not quite right in the head” (197). Kept away from other children at Aristide’s behest, she nonetheless has a precocious intellect that charms Charles. As the investigation into Aristide’s murder unfolds, Josephine involves herself, indulging a fascination with violence and morbidity. She hints to Charles that she knows who the murderer is but refuses to reveal a name. Charles feels protective of her and worries that her close-held knowledge might endanger her life.
Arthur and Taverner exclude Josephine from their official suspect pool because of her age until the novel’s final chapter, when Edith completes a murder-suicide to stop Josephine from doing more damage. Edith leaves behind letters revealing that Josephine indeed committed the two murders at Three Gables: “The crooked child of the little crooked house” (199) poisoned her grandfather and nanny because she was born evil due to a confluence of bad traits from both sides of her family.
Josephine encapsulates Christie’s view of evil as a fixed and immutable quality. While her wickedness was likely exacerbated by the way her parents mistreated her, she is a prototypical example of the bad seed, a born criminal with no moral compass and no chance at redemption.
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