Biography AGATHA CHRISTIE: The Queen of Crime |
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| Agatha Christie is the world's best-known
mystery writer. Her books have sold over a billion copies
in the English language and another billion in over 45
foreign languages. She is outsold only by the Bible and
Shakespeare. Agatha Miller was born in Torquay, England on September 15, 1890. In 1914 she married Colonel Archibald Christie, an aviator in the Royal Flying Corps. The couple had one daughter, Rosalind, before their divorce in 1928. In a writing career that spanned more than half a century, Agatha Christie wrote 79 novels and short story collections. She also wrote over a dozen plays including The Mousetrap, which opened in London on November 25, 1952, and is now the longest continuously running play in theatrical history. Christie's
first novel, The
Mysterious Affair at Styles (1920),
was also the first to feature her eccentric Belgian
detective Hercule
Poirot. Surely one of the most
famous fictional creations of all time, Poirot's
"little grey cells" triumphed over devious
criminals in 33 novels and many dozens of short stories.
Christie’s last published novel, Sleeping Murder (1976), featured her other world-famous sleuth,
the shrewdly inquisitive Miss Jane Marple of St.
Mary Mead. Miss Marple appeared in twelve novels,
beginning with The Murder at the Vicarage in 1930. |
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