Brit Lit Book Club
She sold over two billion books. Her play The Mousetrap has run in London's West End for more than seventy years without a single break. And she once vanished for eleven days in a mystery that has never been solved. Dame Agatha Christie wasn't just writing cozy puzzles — she was a brilliant psychologist, a sharp social observer, and quite possibly the most commercially successful novelist who ever lived. In this episode of The Brit Lit Book Club, we're diving deep into the life and legacy of the undisputed Queen of Crime. Host Vanessa Hunt takes you behind the stories — from Christie's childhood in the elegant seaside town of Torquay to the heartbreak of 1926 (the year her mother died, her husband confessed to an affair, and she mysteriously disappeared), to her unexpectedly happy second act with archaeologist husband Max Mallowan in the deserts of Iraq and Syria. We visit Greenway House, Christie's beloved Georgian manor on the River Dart. We ride the sea tractor to Burgh Island — the Art Deco island that inspired And Then There Were None and Evil Under the Sun. We swim in the cove. We eat the lobster. We also explore what makes her two great detectives — the methodical Hercule Poirot and the deceptively sharp Miss Marple — so enduringly brilliant, and why Christie's "genre fiction" has outlasted nearly every literary prize winner of her era. Whether you're a lifelong Christie devotee or you've never cracked a mystery novel in your life, this episode will send you straight to your bookshelf. In this episode: * The girl who taught herself to read at four (against her mother's wishes) * What working as a WWI nurse taught her about poison — and fiction * The 1926 disappearance: fugue state, breakdown, or something more calculated? * The Golden Age of Detective Fiction and why Christie broke every rule * Burgh Island, the sea tractor, and Christie's most audacious novel * Why two billion readers can't put her down — and why you won't either 📚 Books Mentioned in This Episode Start here if you're new to Christie: * And Then There Were None by Agatha Christie [https://amzn.to/4w5GSEc] — Ten strangers. A sinister nursery rhyme. No way off the island. Her most Gothic, most audacious, most chilling novel. * Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie [https://amzn.to/48yeroh] — A snowbound train, a dead man, and every passenger a suspect. One of the most shocking endings in all of detective fiction. * Evil Under the Sun by Agatha Christie [https://amzn.to/3OXcbjz] — Set directly on Burgh Island. You can trace the action across the actual landscape. More Christie classics: * The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie [https://amzn.to/4ejRnNz] — The plot twist that shocked the literary world in 1926 and still lands nearly a century later. * Dead Man's Folly by Agatha Christie [https://amzn.to/4cIYXAk] — Set at a house just like Greenway, with a boathouse murder that will feel very familiar if you've visited. * Murder in Mesopotamia by Agatha Christie [https://amzn.to/4df9nrp] — Inspired by real people Christie m Love this podcast? Imagine walking the Yorkshire moors where the Brontës found inspiration, visiting Jane Austen's writing desk at Chawton, and exploring Shakespeare's birthplace with fellow book lovers. We do all this and more on The Book Club Tour! Follow along with our adventures, or join us! 🌐 Explore our tours: thebookclubtour.com [https://thebookclubtour.com/] 📸 Instagram: @thebookclubtour [https://www.instagram.com/thebookclubtour] 👥 Facebook: @thebookclubtour [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61550498828175]
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