I've decided that Murder on the Orient Express is my favorite of her books for the time being. If I had to pick one to adapt into a film, it would be So Many Steps to Death (originally published as Destination Unknown). It's a Bond-esque spy thriller about missing scientists and a suicidal young woman who gets enlisted by a government agent to help find them. (It makes sense in context.)
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I know you said you didn't have a favorite, but are there certain ones you like better than others?
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So my copies tend to have the original titles, and indeed some may be duplicates that were reissued under new names -- I didn't check them, I just counted from end to end of the shelf. I also have a complete Dorothy L. Sayers, D.K. Broster (acquired via rare book sellers in the days before the Internet) and Mary Stewart...
I think I probably have read all the Agatha Christies, but not more than once if so, and they tend not to leave much impression -- so when I pull one off the shelf I can't remember who did it ;-p
Some I definitely like less than others (the ones she wrote very late in life tend to be unsatisfactory, not least because she wasn't really in touch with present-day culture at that point, so the attempts at being up to date feel like window dressing). The ones I remember are the obvious tricksy ones, like "The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" and "Murder on the Orient Express", and those are not really my favourites.