Friday, 25 September 2015

Agatha Christie - 25 Pieces of Information

I have chosen Agatha Christie as the author I would like to progress with. Out of the three authors I have researched, I have found valid points for why I would want to work with all of them but the thing that clicked with Christie's books was that they inspired me to draw. I wasn't finding it a chore to read her work and I was becoming engrossed in her stories. 

I have ordered five more books from Amazon and want to get stuck into these as soon as possible. I enjoy drawing objects and observation drawing which is something that her literature will allow me to do due to the significance of the clues to the crimes that she includes. Also, her descriptions of characters, both of appearance ands personality, will hopefully push me to work with character in some way. I haven't enjoyed working with character yet but I am hoping her work will encourage me to be persistent with this and maybe realise that I can do it. 

Finding out more about Christie will be crucial to the development of this project. She is a mystery herself as she has done very few interviews and never went into detail about her personal life. I want to treat this whole project as a mystery of my own and hopefully pull information from various sources to piece together who she was as a person, almost like solving one of her murder mysteries. 


5 Quotes / selected pieces of writing
  • ‘In everybody’s life there are hidden chapters which they hope may never be known.’
  • 'People should be interested in books, not their authors.'
  • 'There's nothing like boredom to make you write.'
  • 'Instinct is a marvelous thing. It can neither be explained nor ignored.' (The Mysterious Affair at Styles)
  • 'What good is money if it can't buy happiness?' (The Man in the Brown Suit)

5 Motifs
  • Poisons - the most popular method of murder in all of Agatha Christie's novels.
  • Money - the most popular motive for the murders in her novels, this could have stemmed from some financial difficulties in her family when she was younger and may also be why most of the characters in her stories are wealthy and of higher classes. 
  • Guns  - guns are often used or mentioned in most of her murder mysteries, it is an iconic symbol of murder  and is particularly relevant to Christie because as a child she had a recurring nightmare of 'the gunman' which potentially sparked her interest in crime writing. 
  • Trains - this was probably Christie's primary method of travel which is why it is mentioned a lot in her novels, numerous murders were committed on trains. 
  • Mousetrap - this is the name of her longest running play, the script was first released with no title on the front page, just an image of the mousetrap and a splash of blood. It could also be a symbol relevant to the rest of her novels to show that the killer gets caught in the end. 

5 Characters
  • Hercule Poirot - a Belgian detective, a fictional character created by Agatha Christie who features in over 30 of her crime novels. 
  • Jane Marple - more commonly known as 'Miss Marple', a fictional character based on Christie's grandmother. Marple is an elderly spinster, not actually a detective, but manages to act as one to solve the murder mysteries. 
  • Linnet Ridgeway - a young, rich and beautiful woman who is one of the murder victims in 'Death on the Nile', I think that the status of her character summarises what Christie bases the motives of her murders on. 
  • Ariadne Oliver - a recurring character featuring in 8 novels, Christie admits that the character is loosely based on herself and although she never directly solves the crime, she often unintentionally leads the detectives towards the solution.
  • Mary Westmacott - Agatha Christie wrote six novels under this name, she used them to try and understand herself and the world and left the stories unresolved. It would be interesting to see this name as her mysterious hidden character. 

5 Locations
  • The English Riviera - the general area where she grew up, various locations in this area feature in her stories sometimes under different names, includes Torquay where she was born. 
  • London - where she over to start a family, a strong contrast to the villages and small towns of where she was raised.
  • Greenway House - her holiday home in Galmpton near Brixham. This is where her notebooks were found and the layout of the house and gardens is picked up on in some of her novels. 
  • Grand houses of the middle/upper classes - a lot of descriptions in her novels to work from.
  • Locations abroad - (Istanbul, Egypt, Jerusalem, St Lucia, France, etc..) Agatha Christie liked an adventure as much as she appreciated her home in Devon. 

5 Pieces of information
  • Studied to be a classical musician but was too nervous to perform. 
  • In the process of qualifying as a dispenser Christie gained a good knowledge of medicine and poisons. 
  • West and theatres dimmed their lights in memory of Agatha Christie on the day she died. 
  • She has only been outsold by William Shakespeare and the Bible. 
  • Agatha Christie had limited education in her early years, her mother wouldn't even allow her to be taught to read until she was 8 years of age.

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