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Agatha Christie.
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Christie, Agatha (1890-1979)
Deemed the creator of the modern detective fiction novel and nicknamed the Duchess of Death, Agatha Christie continues to be one of the most popularly read authors since...
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Biography EssayAgatha Christie is a towering figure in the history of crime literature for two reasons. First, she consolidated the form of the pure mystery novel, achieving in five or six of her book...
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Agatha Christie (1890-1976) was the best selling mystery author of all time and the only writer to have created two major detectives, Poirot and Marple. She also wrote the longest-running play in the ...
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"Oh, I'm an incredible sausage machine," the late mystery writer Agatha Christie once jokingly claimed, speaking of her prolific output of novels, stories, and plays. Christie's many works sold well o...
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Internationally acclaimed as one of the foremost mystery writers of our time, Agatha Christie was also a popular playwright of distinction and the author of such theatrical successes as Ten Little Ind...
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Agatha Christie is a towering figure in the history of crime literature for two reasons. First, she consolidated the form of the pure mystery novel, achieving in five or six of her books puzzle storie...
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Agatha Christie, crime novelist, playwright, poet, travel and short-story writer, has sold more than one billion copies of her books since 1920 and been translated into more languages than William Sha...
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Critical Essay by William Rose BenÉt
"The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" really turns a new trick in detective fiction, surely a difficult enough achievement "with the competitio...
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Critical Essay by Rose Feld
"If you'd nothing to think about but yourself for days on end I wonder what you'd find out about yourself." This is the keynote of Mary Westmaco...
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Critical Essay by Anthony Boucher
Since Agatha Christie is so pre-eminently the mistress of the straight detective story, we're apt to forget how good she can be on her occasional ventures into...
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Critical Essay by Anthony Boucher
Agatha Christie wisely refrains from overworking her star detective, Hercule Poirot, knowing that it's better for us to yearn for more Poirot stories than to c...
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Critical Essay by Anthony Boucher
I strongly suspect that future scholars of the simon-pure detective novel will hold that its greatest practitioner, out-ranking even Ellery Queen and John Dickson Car...
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Critical Essay by Margot Peters and Agate Nesaule Krouse
Critics of the British detective novel have generally agreed that it is a conservative genre. The detective functions as the guardian of the st...
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Critical Essay by Francis Wyndham
Of course nobody is expected to care in any humanist sense: it is, quite simply, that one has to know. Agatha Christie at her best writes animated algebra. She dares ...
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Critical Essay by Adam Ulam
It must have been the heady atmosphere of those World War II days that made Edmund Wilson mount a frontal assault at one of the mainstays of Western civilization. "W...
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Critical Essay by Julian Barnes
Ingenious to the last, Agatha Christie kept back one Poirot and one Miss Marple story, each written some 30 years ago, for publication after her death. The date of its ...
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Critical Essay by Julian Symons
It was the plotting of crime that fascinated [Agatha Christie], not its often unpleasant end, and it is as a constructor of plots that she stands supreme among modern c...
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Critical Essay by Emma Lathen
Why do Americans gulp down Agatha Christie in such quantity? Our most eminent literary critics have asked the question with genuine and growing bewilderment. Their pardon...
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Critical Essay by Naomi Bliven
"An Autobiography," by Agatha Christie … is the work of a writer who depended upon a skeleton—the formal structure of the detective story...
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Critical Essay by E. F. Bargainnier
Hercule Poirot and Jane Marple are the detectives of Agatha Christie known to millions; somewhat less well known are Tuppence and Tommy Beresford and Inspector Batt...
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Critical Essay by Julian Symons
Agatha Christie's success has not been checked by death…. What is it that has made the books live?
Certainly not the quality of the writing, which is at b...
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Critical Essay by Will Cuppy
["Murder in the Calais Coach" is] your best mystery bet of the moment by quite some distance—a thoroughly up-to-snuff Christie that ought to go down i...
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Critical Essay by Gilbert Norwood
Mrs. Christie is known to all connoisseurs of detective stories as beyond comparison the finest practitioner of this delightful craft. She should long ago have receiv...
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In the following essay, Benedict considers the culpability of Christie's murders, arguing that Christie may have paved the way for justifiable murders in mystery fiction.
Just as in politics th...
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In the following essay, Vipond attempts to clarify Christie's representation of women, arguing that Christie's female characters are products of the time.
Agatha Christie's charac...
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In the following essay, Grossvogel explores why Christie's works remain popular today.
It is not uncommon for the demise of an author's popularity to coincide with his actual death, the ...
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In the following essay, Fryxell argues that Christie's works have not been successfully adapted for film.
"Everybody loves a gossip," Agatha Christie once said by way of explainin...
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In the following essay, Bargainnier analyzes Christie's collection of poetry, discussing what her poems reveal about her personality.
In her autobiography Agatha Christie wrote, "The cre...
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In the following essay, Slung argues that the female characters in Christie's mysteries provide role models for women.
With all due respect to P. D. James and Ruth Rendell—to name two wr...
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In the following essay, the reviewers argue that Christie's writing is more complex than critics credit her.
Agatha Christie's position in the critical discourse surrounding the detectiv...
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