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Agatha Christie at home

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"I'm so glad that a new edition is coming! A wonderful, inspirational and essential book for Christie-lovers." Lucy Worsley, author of Agatha Christie: A Very Elusive Woman (Hodder & Stoughton, 2022)'My dear home, my nest, my house': these words from a 1958 song by Jules Bruyere, with which Agatha Christie opened her autobiography, sum up the importance of home to her.

She also wrote: 'What I liked playing with as a child I have liked playing with later in life.

Houses for instance.' She also lovingly included descriptions of houses (especially 'her' houses) in her books. Hilary Macaskill examines the houses that meant most to Agatha Christie, including her childhood home, Ashfield, in Torquay; Winterbrook in Oxfordshire, and, above all, Greenway, soaring above the River Dart and Agatha's favourite home from 1938 to the end of her life in 1976 (though requisitioned in the Second World War by the Admiralty, and from 1943 to 1945 home also to the United States Coast Guard). The author also explores more temporary abodes, not only a succession of flats and houses in London (mainly in Kensington and Chelsea) but also the homes she set up at the digs in the Middle East that she travelled to with her archaeologist husband, Max Mallowan, and the hotels - notably the Moorland Hotel on Dartmoor, to which she adjourned in the grip of writer's block to complete her first detective novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, and the Burgh Island Hotel, a major inspiration for And Then There Were None and Evil Under the Sun.

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Product Details
Pimpernel Press Ltd
1914902009 / 9781914902000
Hardback
823.912
28/09/2023
United Kingdom
English
192 pages : illustrations
23 cm
General (US: Trade) Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: London: Frances Lincoln, 2009.