The White Cockatoo (novel)


The White Cockatoo is a murder mystery novel written by Mignon G. Eberhart. It was published by Doubleday, Doran & Co. in 1933. It was later released in December, 1993, by Thorndike Press. The film served as the basis of the 1935 film of the same name directed by Alan Crosland.

Plot Summary

Americans Sue Talley and Jim Sundean find themselves at the same a small, off-season hotel in the south of France. No sooner do they arrive than a series of murders occur; Sue begins to suspect that the deaths are connected to her arrival.

Composition

Eberhart drew on her experiences traveling in the Alps Maritimes region and staying in just such a hotel in the winter of 1931–32. The name of the town in the book is left intentionally obscure by Eberhart, with the implication that it may be Avignon.

Reception

The New York Times described The White Cockatoo as overly convoluted. The reviewer lamented the fact that Sarah Keate, the primary character of Eberhart's previous few books, did not make an appearance: "It might have been better if she had."
In a private letter to Fanny Butcher, author Gertrude Stein reported that she was reading The White Cockatoo and was impressed by Eberhart's "xtraordinary" writing skill. Crime novelist Dorothy L. Sayers publicly praised the novel.