by Jule Selbo

YEP, that Dame Agatha Mary Clarissa Christie ((1890- 1976) also known as Lady Mallowan because she married archeologist Lord Max Mallowan after her first rascally husband cheated on her – she stayed married to Max for 46 years and loved the ‘digs’ they went on). The above is one of my fav photos of them.

Yep, that Agatha, the British author known for 66 detective novels and 14 short story collections, particularly those revolving around fictional detectives Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple.
Agatha Christie’s mother, Clara, did not want Agatha to learn to read until she was eight because reading was “too pleasurable” to be “virtuous”. But Agatha went behind her mother’s back, she taught herself to read – Agatha says by age 5.

‘I’m afraid, Ma’am,’ said Nursie apologetically to mother the next day, ‘Miss Agatha can read.’ My mother was much distressed – but there it was. Not yet five, but the world of story books was open to me. From then on, for Christmas and birthdays I demanded books. Agatha Christie, An Autobiography
Some of her favorite writers – as she got older – were Elizabeth Bowen, Muriel Spark and Graham Greene. She liked to come up with her own plots during “ordinary life” goings-on.

The really safe and satisfactory place to work out a story in your mind is when you are washing up. The purely mechanical labour helps the flow of ideas and how delightful to find your domestic task finished with no actual remembrance of having done it! Agatha Christie, An Autobiography

Plots come to me at such odd moments: when I am walking along a street, or examining a hat-shop with particular interest, suddenly a splendid idea comes into my head, and I think, ‘Now that would be a neat way of covering up the crime so that nobody would see the point.’ Of course, all the practical details are still to be worked out, and the people have to creep slowly into my consciousness, but I jot down my splendid idea in an exercise book. Agatha Christie, An Autobiography

It never occurred to me to write anything down-and I was quite indifferent to what any[one] thought. I occasionally walk about nowadays muttering to myself – trying to get some chapter that won’t ‘go’ to come right. Agatha Christie, An Autobiography

Agatha’s WRITING PROCESS (this is gathered from a few sources, but not deeply vetted): Many say that Agatha preferred to plot her crime stories from the murder itself. First, she would plan out the mode of murder, the killer, and the purpose. Second, she would factor in the various suspects and their own intents. Third, she would concoct potential clues and diversionary tactics to pull readers in different directions. Others report that Agatha constructed her stories back-to-front. She started with the ending and worked her way back from there. “This way, each of Christie’s novels marched swiftly along to a predestined conclusion and nothing about their plots ever seems random, misplaced, or fizzles out before the end.” (Jule aside: not sure I agree here.)
I have also “heard” that Agatha didn’t decide on the villain until nearer the end of the first draft. She created the problem and the characters and then asked herself – which is the LEAST LIKELY, which one would the reader NEVER SUSPECT. And then chose the character and went back to rework the book to make it “all fit”.
Anyone hear anything else on her process?
This holiday I hope to read her six books written under her pseudonym Mary Westamott. There are not crime mysteries – they are often characterized as romances – they seem like more studies of human nature and people. Here is what Agatha said about her favorite one: Absent in Spring:

“Shortly after that, I wrote the one book that has satisfied me completely. It was a new Mary Westmacott, the book that I had always wanted to write, that had been clear in my mind. It was the picture of a woman with a complete image of herself, of what she was, but about which she was completely mistaken. Through her own actions, her own feelings and thoughts, this would be revealed to the reader. She would be, as it were, continually meeting herself, not recognising herself, but becoming increasingly uneasy. What brought about this revelation would be the fact that for the first time in her life she was alone – completely alone – for four or five days….“I wrote that book in three days flat…I went straight through…I don’t think I have ever been so tired…I didn’t want to change a word and although I don’t know myself of course what it is really like, it was written as I meant to write it, and that is the proudest joy and author can have.”
AND NOW – IN PORTLAND MAINE!
Portland Stage (theatre on Forest Ave, downtown, near Empire Diner) is doing a production of MURDER ON THE LINKS, an adaptation of Christie’s book of the same name. It opens near the end of January. Anita Stewart, the head of the theatre, approached four Maine Crime-Mystery Writers who place their crime mysteries in Maine – and has put together a fun night. Actors will be reading from our books and then there will be a discussion about Agatha’s process, our processes, our love of the genre, Agatha’s legacy etc — I am excited to be part of it and hope some of you will come! January 9th, Thursday. 7 pm.
Here’s the blurb:
January 9th at 7 pm : A WARM UP to Portland Stage’s presentation of Agatha Christies’ Murder on the Links. Agatha is often (and deservedly) called the “Queen of Crime”. Agatha (with 2 billion books sold) is out-paced only by the Bible and Shakespeare. She’s a big reason why crime/mystery is one of the top-selling categories in fiction.
The work of four award-winning Maine crime/mystery writers will be presented. Some of Portland Stage’s favorite actors, directed by Todd Backus, will bring the work to life: Tess Gerritsen, best-selling author, Nero Wolf Award and Edgar Award nominee is known for the Rizzoli and Isles series and Spy Game (the first of the Camden Martini Club series); Ron Currie whose latest thriller The Savage, Noble Death of Babs Dionne follows multiple award-winning novels and short stories. Currie’s ‘Babs Dionne is a Franco-American crime matriarch who rules Waterville, Maine with an iron fist”; Portland’s Bruce Robert Coffin, former PPD (28 years, including time as detective on the Violent Crime Unit) and FBI (on the counter-terrorism unit) turned author who’s been finalist for the Agatha Award, won the Silver Falchion Award and other awards for his Portland Detective Byron Mysteries and short stories; Jule Selbo, former Hollywood screenwriter and author of the Dee Rommel Mystery Series that’s been awarded the Silver Falchion, nominated for Clue Award, Foreword Awards, and listed on Kirkus’ Top Five Crime Fiction novels from Small Publishers. “Dee Rommel is a private investigator – illuminating the ‘underbelly’ of Portland, Maine.”

After the actors bring sections of the writers’ novels to life, there’ll be a short talk-back about the work, Agatha Christie’s legacy and why crime-mysteries provide the puzzles readers love to solve. And of course – there will be the opportunity to gather in the lobby to grab a signed copy of a Maine writer’s mystery!
Thursday, January 9th, 7 pm. Tickets on sale now! $15
MainStage: Portland Stage, 25 Forest Avenue, Portland, Maine
Here is Dame Agatha….