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Published by HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd
1 London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
First published in Great Britain by Collins, The Crime Club 1970
Passenger to Frankfurt™ is a trade mark of Agatha Christie Limited and Agatha Christie® and the Agatha Christie Signature are registered trade marks of Agatha Christie Limited in the UK and elsewhere.
Copyright © 1970 Agatha Christie Limited. All rights reserved.
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Agatha Christie asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
A catalogue copy of this book is available from the British Library.
This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.
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Source ISBN: 9780008196400
Ebook Edition © March 2017 ISBN: 9780007422685
Version: 2017-04-12
To Margaret Guillaume
‘Leadership, besides being a great creative force, can be diabolical …’
Jan Smuts
Contents
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Introduction
BOOK I: Interrupted Journey
1. Passenger to Frankfurt
2. London
3. The Man from the Cleaners
4. Dinner with Eric
5. Wagnerian Motif
6. Portrait of a Lady
7. Advice from Great-Aunt Matilda
8. An Embassy Dinner
9. The House near Godalming
BOOK II: Journey to Siegfried
10. The Woman in the Schloss
11. The Young and the Lovely
12. Court Jester
BOOK III: At Home and Abroad
13. Conference in Paris
14. Conference in London
15. Aunt Matilda Takes a Cure
16. Pikeaway Talks
17. Herr Heinrich Spiess
18. Pikeaway’s Postscript
19. Sir Stafford Nye has Visitors
20. The Admiral Visits an Old Friend
21. Project Benvo
22. Juanita
23. Journey to Scotland
Epilogue
Also by Agatha Christie
About the Publisher
The Author speaks:
The first question put to an author, personally, or through the post, is:
‘Where do you get your ideas from?’
The temptation is great to reply: ‘I always go to Harrods,’ or ‘I get them mostly at the Army & Navy Stores,’ or, snappily, ‘Try Marks and Spencer.’
The universal opinion seems firmly established that there is a magic source of ideas which authors have discovered how to tap.
One can hardly send one’s questioners back to Elizabethan times, with Shakespeare’s:
Tell me, where is fancy bred,
Or in the heart or in the head?
How begot, how nourished?
Reply, reply.
You merely say firmly: ‘My own head.’
That, of course, is no help to anybody. If you like the look of your questioner you relent and go a little further.
‘If one idea in particular seems attractive, and you feel you could do something with it, then you toss it around, play tricks with it, work it up, tone it down, and gradually get it into shape. Then, of course, you have to start writing it. That’s not nearly such fun—it becomes hard work. Alternatively, you can tuck it carefully away, in storage, for perhaps using in a year or two years’ time.’
A second question—or rather a statement—is then likely to be:
‘I suppose you take most of your characters from real life?’
An indignant denial to that monstrous suggestion.
‘No, I don’t. I invent them. They are mine. They’ve got to be my characters—doing what I want them to do, being what I want them to be—coming alive for me, having their own ideas sometimes, but only because I’ve made them become real.’
So the author has produced the ideas, and the characters—but now comes the third necessity—the setting. The first two come from inside sources,