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Nemesis

 Nemesis
type
TVTItem
 Nemesis
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Nemesis
 Nemesis
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Nemesis
 Nemesis
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Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })Nemesis is a 1971 novel by Agatha Christie.Miss Jane Marple receives out of the blue a letter from the estate of millionaire financier Jason Rafiel, a man she knew briefly while on vacation in the island of St Honoré—that being the plot of A Caribbean Mystery. Mr. Rafiel has died, and he has left Miss Marple a bequest of £20,000, but on a strange condition. Mr. Rafiel, who knew Miss Marple for only a short while but saw first-hand her fearlessness, her detective skills, and her dedication to justice, has instructed his lawyers that Miss Marple will receive the money only if she solves a certain crime. The only problem is, the will says absolutely nothing about what that crime is.Intrigued, Miss Marple accepts the request. No explanatory details are forthcoming, but she does soon get a message that Mr. Rafiel paid for her to join a bus tour of notable English houses and gardens. Assuming that her ticket was purchased for a reason, Miss Marple goes on a tour. Also on the tour is one Elizabeth Temple, a retired school administrator who reveals an important piece of the puzzle. Some years ago one of her students, Verity Hunt, was once engaged to be married to Jason Rafiel's son Michael, but that the marriage did not happen.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })The tour stops in a sleepy English village, where Miss Marple gets another surprise. She is approached by a Mrs. Lavinia Glynne, who reveals that Mr. Rafiel, a friend of the family, requested that Mrs. Glynne and her two sisters host Miss Marple during what is reportedly a physically taxing part of the tour that requires a lot of hiking not suitable for an old lady. It is at the home of Mrs. Glynne and her unmarried sisters Clotilde Bradbury-Scott and Anthea Bradbury-Scott that Miss Marple learns the rest of the puzzle. The Hunt-Rafiel marriage didn't happen because Verity Hunt was murdered. Michael Rafiel is now in jail serving a life sentence for that murder. Miss Marple, assuming that this is the mystery she's been hired to solve, sets out to discover who really killed Verity Hunt.The last Miss Marple novel Christie wrote, although not the last to be published, as Sleeping Murder was published in 1976 (as Christie's last novel ever) after spending some 35 years on the shelf. Not to be confused with the Nemesis Series of superhero novels by April Daniels.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_3'); })
 Nemesis
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2022-07-26T10:43:22Z
 Nemesis
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2022-07-26T10:43:22Z
 Nemesis
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Dropped link to AtBertramsHotel: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Nemesis
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Dropped link to DyingWish: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 Nemesis
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Dropped link to TheThirteenProblems: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Nemesis
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DyingWish
 Nemesis
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DBTropes
 Nemesis / int_1606a707
type
Secret Test
 Nemesis / int_1606a707
comment
Secret Test: Anthea speaks as if she's big into gardening, but when Miss Marple asks several questions about plants, Anthea knows almost nothing.
 Nemesis / int_1606a707
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Nemesis / int_1606a707
 Nemesis / int_182f59f9
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On One Condition
 Nemesis / int_182f59f9
comment
On One Condition: Miss Marple will receive a sizeable cash bequest, but only if she can solve a crime. What crime? She'll just have to wait to find out, but she only has a year to solve it in order to get the money.
 Nemesis / int_182f59f9
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 Nemesis / int_18d15922
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Title Drop
 Nemesis / int_18d15922
comment
Title Drop: "Nemesis" is the "code word" that Mr. Rafiel uses in his Dead Man Writing letter to Miss Marple, asking her to solve a crime.
 Nemesis / int_18d15922
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Nemesis / int_18d15922
 Nemesis / int_1989b0c
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Comic-Book Time
 Nemesis / int_1989b0c
comment
Comic-Book Time: Played with. Basically this trope is still in effect as Miss Marple is an elderly lady solving crimes over 40 years after the character was introduced as the Trope Maker for Little Old Lady Investigates. However, in this last Miss Marple novel she is said to be old and infirm, hard of hearing with aches and pains, and this is even plot relevant as it's the reason she temporarily stays with the three sisters.
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Nemesis / int_1989b0c
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Chekhov's Gun
 Nemesis / int_22cf536c
comment
Chekhov's Gun: The collapsed greenhouse behind the Bradbury-Scott house, mentioned multiple times, and how it was overgrown by vines and how Anthea once got a quote for restoring the greenhouse, causing Clotilde to flip out. Verity Hunt is buried under the rubble. It's noted more than once that when Verity Hunt was found, her face had been bashed in and disfigured. That was done on purpose, because the dead body wasn't Verity Hunt.
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Nemesis / int_22cf536c
 Nemesis / int_2310dacb
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Dead Man Writing
 Nemesis / int_2310dacb
comment
Dead Man Writing: Miss Marple receives from the late Jason Rafiel's lawyers a letter from him, asking her to "investigate a certain crime" and citing her passion for justice.
 Nemesis / int_2310dacb
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Nemesis / int_2310dacb
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False Rape Accusation
 Nemesis / int_3763bcf8
comment
False Rape Accusation: Miss Marple and Prof. Wanstead share a less-than-enlightened view of rape in which, supposedly, young women claim to be raped in order to avoid embarrassment after consensual sex. Prof. Wanstead believes this happened with Michael Rafiel.
 Nemesis / int_3763bcf8
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Nemesis / int_3763bcf8
 Nemesis / int_434d893c
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Funny Foreigner
 Nemesis / int_434d893c
comment
Funny Foreigner: Mr. Caspar, a minor character, who exists for comic relief and who speaks "a most peculiar English" sprinkled with French and German.
 Nemesis / int_434d893c
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Nemesis / int_434d893c
 Nemesis / int_4c30f8f0
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Twitchy Eye
 Nemesis / int_4c30f8f0
comment
Twitchy Eye: Among the various quirks marking Anthea Bradbury-Scott off as not quite right in the head is "one eyelid which twitched from time to time."
 Nemesis / int_4c30f8f0
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Nemesis / int_4c30f8f0
 Nemesis / int_5002845
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Warm Milk Helps You Sleep
 Nemesis / int_5002845
comment
Warm Milk Helps You Sleep: Clotilde offers Miss Marple a glass of warm milk when she goes to bed. Miss Marple agrees, on the grounds that it "always gives one a good night".
 Nemesis / int_5002845
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Nemesis / int_5002845
 Nemesis / int_58510e2b
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Sexy Packaging
 Nemesis / int_58510e2b
comment
Sexy Packaging: In-Universe, as Miss Marple sees a book cover she dislikes. "Miss Marple looked with distaste at the jacket of the book, a naked girl with blood-stained markings on her face and a sinister-looking killer bending over her with a blood-stained knife in his hand." Agatha Christie disliked salacious covers and insisted on the right of approval for the covers of her books.
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Nemesis / int_58510e2b
 Nemesis / int_59af9477
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Delinquents
 Nemesis / int_59af9477
comment
Delinquents: Michael Rafiel was quite the delinquent in his youth, involved in "various gangster activities", vandalism, theft, knocking women up, a couple of brief stints in jail, accusations of rape. All of that made him the easy suspect when Verity Hunt disappeared.
 Nemesis / int_59af9477
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Nemesis / int_59af9477
 Nemesis / int_59ddd555
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Psycho Lesbian
 Nemesis / int_59ddd555
comment
Psycho Lesbian: Clotilde, the jealous psycho who murdered her love Verity Hunt rather than let Verity marry a man. She proceeded to bury Verity in her own backyard and then kill a completely different person as part of a plot to frame Michael Rafiel for Verity's murder. Miss Marple connects lesbianism in general with abnormality:
 Nemesis / int_59ddd555
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Nemesis / int_59ddd555
 Nemesis / int_5a23602
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Big Ol' Eyebrows
 Nemesis / int_5a23602
comment
Big Ol' Eyebrows: Prof. Wanstead is described as having "enormous bushy eyebrows which moved up and down to give point to what he was saying."
 Nemesis / int_5a23602
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Nemesis / int_5a23602
 Nemesis / int_6774150c
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If I Can't Have You…
 Nemesis / int_6774150c
comment
If I Can't Have You…: Clotilde, the Psycho Lesbian in love with Verity Hunt, killed her rather than let her marry Michael Rafiel.
 Nemesis / int_6774150c
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Nemesis / int_6774150c
 Nemesis / int_6d332aea
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Driven to Suicide
 Nemesis / int_6d332aea
comment
Driven to Suicide: Once she realizes the game is up, Clotilde drinks the poisoned milk she was going to give to Miss Marple.
 Nemesis / int_6d332aea
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Nemesis / int_6d332aea
 Nemesis / int_8163e2bb
type
Dramatic Drop
 Nemesis / int_8163e2bb
comment
Dramatic Drop: When Miss Marple mentions the single name "Verity", Mrs. Glynne drops the book she was holding and looks at Miss Marple in surprise. This is when Miss Marple gets them to reveal the details of what happened to Verity Hunt.
 Nemesis / int_8163e2bb
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Nemesis / int_8163e2bb
 Nemesis / int_86b21114
type
Badass Boast
 Nemesis / int_86b21114
comment
Badass Boast: Miss Marple delivers one that's a Title Drop:
 Nemesis / int_86b21114
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Nemesis / int_86b21114
 Nemesis / int_8b568cb7
type
Posthumous Character
 Nemesis / int_8b568cb7
comment
Posthumous Character: Jason Rafiel, who leaves Miss Marple a bequest and a Dead Man Writing letter, and is discussed throughout the narrative.
 Nemesis / int_8b568cb7
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Nemesis / int_8b568cb7
 Nemesis / int_9c209a57
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The Hecate Sisters
 Nemesis / int_9c209a57
comment
The Hecate Sisters: The three Bradbury-Scott sisters, living alone in their falling-down mansion and overgrown garden. The scatty, mind-wandering Anthea who can't seem to focus on the present is the never-married Maiden, Miss Glynne — the only one of the trio who married and who is the steadiest and most sympathetic of the three — is the Matron/Mother, and domineering Clotilde whom Miss Marple sees as a modern Clytemnestra and who murdered Verity Hunt is the Crone. On top of that...
 Nemesis / int_9c209a57
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Nemesis / int_9c209a57
 Nemesis / int_9dab0a6e
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Continuity Nod
 Nemesis / int_9dab0a6e
comment
Continuity Nod: Beyond this book being a sequel to A Caribbean Mystery and mentioning that story several times, there's a moment when Miss Marple checks into a London hotel and remembers how much she enjoyed Bertram's Hotel. Elizabeth Temple and Miss Marple have a mutual friend: Henry Clithering of Scotland Yard, a character who pops up in Miss Marple books dating back to The Thirteen Problems.
 Nemesis / int_9dab0a6e
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Nemesis / int_9dab0a6e
 Nemesis / int_9fb41dce
type
The Weird Sisters
 Nemesis / int_9fb41dce
comment
The Weird Sisters: the Bradbury-Scott sisters, definitely. Three odd, old women who live alone, who are considered to have gotten very strange after their ward, Verity Hunt, died, and who not only are examples of The Hecate Sisters, but are whole-character references to the Three Fates of Greek mythology. Miss Marple even calls them the "three weird sisters" and the "three witches of Macbeth". This becomes even more overwhelming when you realize that Verity's murderer, Clotilde, has her name based on Clotho, the one who spun the thread of human lives and controlled their fate; Clotilde killed Verity to prevent her from escaping Clotilde's control and living her own life.
 Nemesis / int_9fb41dce
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Nemesis / int_9fb41dce
 Nemesis / int_9fda81a7
type
The Summation
 Nemesis / int_9fda81a7
comment
The Summation: As usual with Miss Marple novels, the book ends with her explaining her deduction process and how she identified the killer.
 Nemesis / int_9fda81a7
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Nemesis / int_9fda81a7
 Nemesis / int_a058376e
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Pseudo-Romantic Friendship
 Nemesis / int_a058376e
comment
Pseudo-Romantic Friendship: The trope is discussed concerning the relationship between two characters:
 Nemesis / int_a058376e
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Nemesis / int_a058376e
 Nemesis / int_a3673c4c
type
It Gets Easier
 Nemesis / int_a3673c4c
comment
It Gets Easier: Miss Marple's diagnosis of Clotilde as she observes how Clotilde moved on to her next murder.
 Nemesis / int_a3673c4c
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Nemesis / int_a3673c4c
 Nemesis / int_b3dbc942
type
Sequel
 Nemesis / int_b3dbc942
comment
Sequel: Nemesis is the sequel to A Caribbean Mystery; the whole plot is due to the Dying Wish of Jason Rafiel, a character Miss Marple meets in the previous book.
 Nemesis / int_b3dbc942
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Nemesis / int_b3dbc942
 Nemesis / int_b4b2a42a
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Widowed at the Wedding
 Nemesis / int_b4b2a42a
comment
Widowed at the Wedding: In the backstory, Verity died right before she was to marry Michael Rafiel.
 Nemesis / int_b4b2a42a
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Nemesis / int_b4b2a42a
 Nemesis / int_cc107e3b
type
Introdump
 Nemesis / int_cc107e3b
comment
Intro Dump: All the guests on the tour bus, basically all the main characters except for the three sisters, are introduced together in the long passage when Miss Marple joins the tour.
 Nemesis / int_cc107e3b
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Nemesis / int_cc107e3b
 Nemesis / int_db2f3581
type
All Girls Want Bad Boys
 Nemesis / int_db2f3581
comment
All Girls Want Bad Boys: Miss Marple's explanation for why women, and Verity Hunt in particular, kept falling for the delinquent and reprobate Michael Rafiel.
 Nemesis / int_db2f3581
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Nemesis / int_db2f3581
 Nemesis / int_e33a31d0
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Gay Romantic Phase
 Nemesis / int_e33a31d0
comment
Gay Romantic Phase: Verity apparently went through a period where she had romantic relationships with other women during her time at school. unfortunately for her, one of the girls she dated, Clotilde, was a Psycho Lesbian who came back to murder her rather than let her marry a man.
 Nemesis / int_e33a31d0
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Big Damn Heroes
 Nemesis / int_eb81c601
comment
Big Damn Heroes: Miss Barrow and Miss Cooke show up to find Miss Marple peacefully talking with the murderer.
 Nemesis / int_eb81c601
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Nemesis / int_eb81c601
 Nemesis / int_f068cba
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Oddball in the Series
 Nemesis / int_f068cba
comment
Oddball in the Series: A rare example of a Miss Marple book where she is present throughout the narrative and is also the POV character. In most of the Miss Marple series the story is told through a third-person POV character who observes Miss Marple detecting.
 Nemesis / int_f068cba
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Nemesis / int_f068cba
 Nemesis / int_f1d3f0c9
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Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness
 Nemesis / int_f1d3f0c9
comment
Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness: How Prof. Wanstead explains that he sometimes works as a prison psychiatrist. Hilariously, he starts his long-winded spiel by saying "I'm not going to make a long story of things."
 Nemesis / int_f1d3f0c9
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Nemesis / int_f1d3f0c9
 Nemesis / int_f2097aef
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Finally Found the Body
 Nemesis / int_f2097aef
comment
Finally Found the Body: The body identified some ten years ago as Verity Hunt was not Verity Hunt. In fact, Verity is buried under the ruins of the collapsed greenhouse behind the house where the three sisters live.
 Nemesis / int_f2097aef
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Nemesis / int_f2097aef
 Nemesis / int_f788b2c5
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Love Makes You Evil
 Nemesis / int_f788b2c5
comment
Love Makes You Evil: Clotilde killed her beloved Verity rather than let Verity marry Michael Rafiel.
 Nemesis / int_f788b2c5
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Nemesis / int_f788b2c5
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Have a Gay Old Time
 Nemesis / int_fa6bfde9
comment
Have a Gay Old Time: Apparently it was once a thing in England to call a harmless old lady like Miss Marple an "old pussy". This particular phrase is used by Miss Marple over and over again, although even she recognizes that it was mostly in use "in rather earlier days."
 Nemesis / int_fa6bfde9
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Nemesis / int_fa6bfde9
 Nemesis / int_fd94c4ac
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Theme Naming
 Nemesis / int_fd94c4ac
comment
Theme Naming: The three Bradbury-Scott sisters' names (Clotilde, Lavinia and Anthea) evoke the three Fates: Clotho, Lachesis and Atropos.
 Nemesis / int_fd94c4ac
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Nemesis

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Nemesis
seeAlso
Nemesis