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Agatha Christie’s Complete Secret Notebooks


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the intricate detective story … and what I can only describe as the detective story that has a kind of passion behind it …’

       An Autobiography

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       SOLUTIONS REVEALED

      The ABC MurdersAfter the FuneralAppointment with DeathThe Body in the LibraryCurtain: Poirot’s Last CaseDeath in the CloudsDeath on the NileEndless NightEvil under the Sun4.50 from PaddingtonHercule Poirot’s ChristmasThe HollowLord Edgware DiesThe Man in the Brown Suit; • ‘The Man in the Mist’ • ‘The Market Basing Mystery’ • The MousetrapThe Murder at the Vicarage • ‘Murder in the Mews’ • The Murder of Roger AckroydMurder on the Orient ExpressThe Mysterious Affair at StylesOne, Two, Buckle my ShoeOrdeal by InnocenceA Pocket Full of RyeSparkling CyanideTaken at the FloodThey Came to BaghdadThey Do It with MirrorsThree Act Tragedy • ‘The Unbreakable Alibi’ • ‘The Witness for the Prosecution’

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      ‘Surely you won’t let Agatha Christie fool you again. That would be “again” – wouldn’t it?’ Thus read the advertisement, at the back of many of her early Crime Club books, announcing recent and forthcoming titles from the Queen of Crime. The first Crime Club novel bearing the now-famous hooded gunman logo, was Philip MacDonald’s The Noose in May 1930; Agatha Christie’s first Crime Club title, The Murder at the Vicarage, followed in October of that year. By then Collins had already published, between 1926 and 1929, five Christie titles – The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, The Big Four, The Mystery of the Blue Train, The Seven Dials Mystery and Partners in Crime – in their general fiction list. As soon as The Crime Club was founded, her’s was an obvious name to include and over the next half century she proved to be one of the most prolific authors – and by far the most successful – to appear under its imprint. This author/publisher relationship continued for the rest of her writing life, almost all of her titles appearing with the accompaniment of the hooded gunman.2

      As the dustjacket on the first edition of The Murder at the Vicarage states, ‘The Crime Club has been formed so that all interested in Detective Fiction may, at NO COST TO THEMSELVES, be kept advised of the best new Detective Novels before they are published.’ By 1932 and Peril at End House, The Crime Club was boasting that ‘Over 25,000 have joined already. The list includes doctors, clergymen, lawyers, University Dons, civil servants, business men; it includes two millionaires, three world-famous statesmen, thirty-two knights, eleven peers of the realm, two princes of royal blood and one princess.’

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      This is the first edition title page of The Murder at the Vicarage, the first Agatha Christie title to appear under The Crime Club imprint on 13th October 1930.

      And the advertisement on the first edition wrapper of The ABC Murders (1936) clearly states the Club’s aims and objectives:

      The object of the Crime Club is to provide that vast section of the British Public which likes a good detective story with a continual supply of first-class books by the finest writers of detective fiction. The Panel of five experts selects the good and eliminates the bad, and ensures that every book published under the Crime Club mark is a clean and intriguing example of this class of literature. Crime Club books are not mere thrillers. They are restricted to works in which there is a definite crime problem, an honest detective process, with a credible and logical solution. Members of the Crime Club receive the Crime Club News issued at intervals.

      As this suggests, not for nothing was the 1930s known as the Golden Age of detective fiction, an era during which the creation and enjoyment of a detective story was a serious business for reader, writer and publisher. All three took the elaborate conventions seriously. The civilised outrage that followed the publication of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd in 1926 showed what a serious breach of the rules its solution was considered at the time. So, while in many ways observing the so-called ‘rules’, and consolidating the image of a safe, cosy and comforting type of fiction, Agatha Christie also constantly challenged those ‘rules’ and, by regularly and mischievously tweaking, bending, and breaking them, subverted the expectations of her readers and critics. She was both the mould creator and mould breaker, who delighted in effectively saying to her fans, ‘Here is the comforting read that you expect when you pick up my new book but because I respect your intelligence and my own professionalism, I intend to fool you.’

      But how did she fool her readers while at the same time retaining her vice-like grip on their admiration and loyalty? In order to understand how she managed this feat it is necessary to take a closer look at ‘The Rules’.

       THE RULES OF DETECTIVE FICTION – POE, KNOX, VAN DINE

       Edgar Allan Poe: inventor of the detective story

      In April 1841 the American periodical Graham’s Magazine published Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’ and introduced a new literary form, the detective story. The unwritten ground-rules that distinguish detective fiction from other forms of crime writing – the thriller, the suspense story, the mystery story – were established in five Poe short stories. He pioneered:

      Image Missing The brilliant amateur detective

      Image Missing The less-than-brilliant narrator-friend

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      Image Missing The interpretation of a code

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      All of Poe’s pioneering initiatives were exploited by subsequent generations of crime writers and although many of those writers introduced variations on, and combinations of, them, no other writer ever established so many influential concepts. Christie, as we shall see, exploited them to the full.

      The first, and most important, of the Poe stories, ‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’, incorporated the