In a quiet English village, a wealthy widow dies under suspicious circumstances then, the very next night, a man who may have known the truth is found murdered in his study. Called in to make sense of the contradictions is the famously meticulous Belgian detective Hercule Poirot, now living in retirement nearby. The facts seem straightforward until they don't: letters that arrive too late, conversations that mean two things at once, and timelines that refuse to sit still. As Poirot pulls gently at the seams of village respectability, every household reveals a private fear, a buried grievance, or a carefully managed lie. The closer he gets to the answer, the more the case becomes a test of perception itself how stories are told, who controls them, and what people will do to keep their version of events intact. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd is a landmark classic mystery tight, clever, and unforgettable built around one of the genre's most audacious puzzles.