Analysis of Justice Theme in “And Then There Were None”

The majority of murder mysteries review justice—its demolition, through the murder act, and its recovery, by the work of a detective that solves the crime and guarantees that the criminal pays for his or her deed. “And Then There Were None” is another masterpiece like this that explores justice, but it turns the direction by presenting the victims of murder people who did murder themselves. Thus, the successes on Indian Island are conceivably actions of justice. Judge Wargrave in this novel does all the work of murderer and detective by striking out those who are wrong and punishing them for their crimes.