Agatha Christie was sure the world's best-selling crime writer.
Moreover, she was an immensely prolific writer. 79 shot stories, 4
non-fiction ones and 19 plays were written by that strange woman. They
were translated into 136 languages. Over 3 billion books by Agatha
Christie were sold worldwide. She is popular for ingenuity of plots,
which are classical murder mysteries: marooned places and a
well-mannered murderer. Her way to present the stories was quite
different from that of her colleagues. In the first place, her stories
appealed to the readers inside, so you can't find much blood and
violence in her stories.
Agatha Christie created two major characters for her stories. Hercule
Poirot, a Belgian, used to work in the Police, but by the time of the
action he already retired. He can be described as a funny little man
taken by many readers as a comic personage. He had a luxurious moustache
and he was really proud of it.
Miss Marple was the complete opposite of Poirot. She wasn't a
professional and had never been one. She was just an old spinster, very
modest but perceptive and not a flamboyant personality, who acted as a
detective just by virtue of taking thought.
Agatha Christie's favourite way of murdering was poisoning. She
accurately described the process because she had learned a lot about
poisons and other chemicals during World War II, while working in a
hospital.
The reader has to solve the mystery and decide who the murderer is
together with the author. Most of the crimes were committed in some
closed surroundings with a limited number of people to suspect. Finally
the identity of the murderer is revealed and the reader is hooked and
starts looking for another book by Agatha Christie.
Agatha Christie lived between 1890 and 1976. She started writing stories
at a very early age, at first to entertain herself. However, she
managed to become famous. Not many people know that she used to write
under a pen-name of Mary Westmacott. Later, already as a world-known
writer, she tried to avoid publicity and stayed out of the public eye.
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