Character+Sketch+PB

The book, "And then there were none", takes place on Indian Island where ten guests were invited to be systematically murdered, the circumstances of there deaths eerily resembling those of ten little Indians in a poem. Their killer an enigma that goes by the name U.N. Owen has invited them to his island and accused them of murders that were over looked by the authorities and now undoubtedly has decided to dish out his own form of Justice. The guests do not know who Mr. Owen is or what he looks like all they know is that the motor boat that had took them there is not coming back, and since they have gotten there Mr. Owen has been picking them off one by one and will most certainly continue until there are none.

So far in the book little is still known about Mr.Owen. Even with the efforts of Dr. Armstrong, Lumbard and Blore trying there hardest to find him on the island they returned to the house in disbelief they couldn't find a plausible explanation for were Mr. Owen could be hiding. The house was brand new there were no secret passage ways or hidden doors (72) and there were no caves on the cliff side were someone could seek refuge after killing one of the guests (121) so they went back to the house with no answers and found every one in the living room. It is there after telling Justice Wargrave that there search of the island failed, that Wargrave came to a stunning conclusion, he stated that, "There is only one way in which that scheme could be accomplished. Mr. Owen could only come to the island in one way It's perfectly clear. Mr. Owen is one of us" (136). I agree completely with Justice Wargrave but the only question is who is Mr. Owen it was proven that none of them were completely innocent but some thing tells me that it is the person they least suspect, Justice Wargrave himself, but that is yet to be seen, right now it's just a hunch.

Now you may be asking why do I think that Justice Wargrave is U.N. Owen. Well lets look at the facts, given his profession he would have access to files most others wouldn't. So he looked up the names of people who literally got away with murder or in his mind were obviously guilty. Being a Judge he may have felt responsible for carrying out the law and began devising a plan to serve the victims justice.