Biography
of Agatha Christie
In 1914, at the age of 24, she married Archie Christie, a World War I fighter pilot. While he was off at war, she worked as a nurse. It was while working in a hospital during the war that Christie first came up with the idea of writing a detective novel. Although it was completed in a year, it wasn't published until 1920.
In 1926, Agatha made news herself when she disappeared for a few days after her husband wanted a divorce. She was soon found to be staying in a hotel under an alias. Her disappearance is still a mystery! She and Archibald divorced in 1928.
She fell in love with Max Mallowan, a young archaeologist whom she met on a trip to Mesopotamia and married in 1930 and Agatha Christie became Agatha Christie Mallowan. In 1971 she was awarded the high honor of becoming a Dame of the British Empire.
Agatha Christie ultimately became the acknowledged
Queen of the Golden Age. She wrote nearly seventy novels in her career
and more than a hundred short stories. Her most famous characters are Hercule
Poirot and Miss Marple. Agatha Christie also wrote six romantic novels
under the name Mary Westmacott. Several of her works were made into successful
feature films, the most notable being Murder on the Orient Express (1974).
Agatha's plays have also made her famous and her best known play, The Mousetrap,
is most likely the best known mystery play in the world. Her work has been
translated into more than a hundred languages. In short, she is the single
most popular mystery writer of all time.
Agatha Christie died in 12 January 1976,
two years after Max Mallowan died.