Agatha Christie (full name Agatha Mary Clarissa Miller) was born in Torquay, England on September fifth, 1890. Agatha's father's name was Fredrick Miller, he was an American, and her mother's name was Clarissa 'Clara' Miller. Agatha had an older brother named Monty and an older sister, Margret. Margret received a formal education while Clara decided against that path for Agatha. Agatha taught herself to read at five years of age and the rest of her education came from governesses, tutors, and French finishing schools. While in school Agatha developed a passion for singing, along with her writing, but never perused it as a career. At an early age Agatha demonstrated her creativity by acting out stories for fun. At age eleven Agatha's father died which brought her even closer to the already close relationship she had with her mother. After her father died, her mother took up traveling and would take Agatha along with her. Agatha developed a love for traveling and continued to do so as she grew older. In the year of 1912 Agatha met a young man named Archie Christie, an aviator in the Royal Flying Corps. After a two-year romance, Agatha and Archie were married on Christmas Eve in 1914. Shortly after their marriage Archie was sent off to fight in World War I. During that time Agatha did her part in the war by becoming a nurse for the Voluntary Aid Detachment of the Red Cross Hospital in Torquay. Agatha and Archie had one daughter, Rosalind, who was born in 1919. In 1920 Agatha’s writing career began with her first book, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, was published. The book received good reviews and because she was so descriptive with the poison it got a review in the Pharmaceutical Journal. Agatha’s writing career span for over fift...
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...me and she never would have achieved the success that she did.
Works Cited
“Agatha Christie: Biography”. Agatha Christie: Home. 2009. Web. 24 Mar. 2011.
Christie, Agatha. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd. New York, New York: First Harper Paperbacks Printing, 1991. Print.
Merriman, C.D. “Agatha Christie- Biography and Works. Search Texts, Read Online. Discuss”. The Literature Network: Online Classics Literature, Poems, and Quotes. Essays & Summaries. 2007. Web. 24 Mar. 2011.
Robyns, Gwen. The Mystery of Agatha Christie. 1st ed. Garden City, New York: Doubleday and Company Inc, 1978. Print.
Wagoner, Mary S. “Chapter 3: The Detection Novels: Finding the Form (1920-1929).” Agatha Christie. Mary S. Wagoner. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1986. Twayne’s English Authers series 432. Literature Resource Center. Web. 28 Mar. 2011.
In Brother Grimm’s “Brother Lustig”, the main character, Brother Lustig, is initially portrayed as an honest, inexperienced and stupid young man, who shares all his possessions with others. For this reason, when analyzing Brother Grimm’s tale form a Jungian psychoanalytic perspective, will become a prime example of a character experiencing individuation, for he eventually becomes a more selfish, cunning and independent person. Through meeting his archetypes, Brother Lustig goes from an honest, stupid and generous person, who shares his wealth and possessions with the less fortunate ones to a cunning, selfish and self-sufficient trickster. Brother Lustig’s burgeoning conscious is demonstrated through an analysis of his Jungian archetypes, with the shapeshifting beggar, acting as his positive shadow, and St. Peter personifying as his symbolic Self.
Susan Elizabeth George is a competent British author with a rich background. She wrote many distinguished books and won numerous awards, which all began when she was a teacher at El Toro High School. She writes mystery murders, which gained widespread popularity. From an article from The New York Times, Mel Gussow described George as ''a master of the English mystery, with an ear for local language and an eye for the inner workings of Scotland Yard'' (Gussow). George has a productive and fulfilling life accompanied by her many successful novels and awards.
Rodek, Kimberly M. “Women in Literature: Women in the Twentieth Century and Beyond”. ivcc. 30 May 2006. Web. 5 May 2014.
Agatha Christie was born in Torquay, Devon, England on September 15th, 1890. She was the daughter of Frederick Alvah Miller and Clarissa Margaret Miller (Agatha Christie). Her father was an American who dwindled in stockbroking, but unfortunately died when Agatha was the age of eleven. (Agatha Christie’s Biography, Luzmore). Her mother “Clara” was the daughter of a British army captain. Agatha was the youngest child and had one elder brother and one elder sister. Her elder brother, Louis Montant Miller, was ten years older and her elder sister Margaret Frary Miller was eleven years older (Agatha Christie’s Biography, Luzmore). Agatha spent her childhood alone while her brother and sister were at school, and this isolation led to her extensive imagination (Agatha Christie’s Biography, Luzmore). She never received a formal education but was taught by her parents and nurse (Magill 94-97). Agatha Christie was able to teach herself the ability of reading by the age of five (Agatha Christie’s Biography, Luzmore). At the age of sixteen, she received her first formal education in Paris. She learned about singing and piano (Agatha Christie’s Biography, Luzmore). Later at the age of twenty five, Christie began contemplating the idea of being an author. She was told by her sister that she was incapable of writing, and this is what inspired her to start writing books (Agatha Christie’s Biography, Luzmore). In the year 1914, Agatha Christie married Archibald Christie whom she met while working as a nurse at the hospital (Agatha Christie). Archie and Agatha went on to have their only child, Rosalind Hicks, who was born on August 5th, 1915 (Agatha Christie’s Biography, Luzmore). This experience in the medical fi...
Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None, published by Washington Square Press, is regarded by most critics to be her masterpiece. After publishing almost eighty books, this was the one she was truly most proud of. Why? Mainly, because critics have quoted it to have sold more copies than Shakespeare and the Bible. However, Christie has so much more to be proud of in this novel.
“By the Pricking of My Thumbs'; by Agatha Christie is a wonderful story with kidnappings, a series of murders, a painting with a story to tell, and two sly detectives. The book is set in 1940-1960 England. The plot winds, twists, and turns throughout the book. Numerous characters, almost too many, are introduced every few pages and there is just too much information to take in. Agatha Christie tricks you into thinking that you know what is going on when you really don’t have a clue.
Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar, The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1979)
Gilbert, S., Gubar, S. (2000) The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and Nineteenth Century Literary Imagination Yale University Press
...l E. "Margaret Atwood and the Poetics of Duplicity." The Art of Margaret Atwood. Ed. Arnold E. Davidson. Toronto: House of Anansi Press, 1981.
...hemes of feminism, stereotypes, and socioeconomics. Christie shows the fact that her motives in most of her books are similar. The overall message about Agatha Christie is that she writes her books based on what she knows. Cathy Luzmore, author of Agatha Christie’s Influences on her Writings, concludes, “These travels inspired not only Murder on the Orient Express, but also Murder in Mesopotamia, Death on the Nile, Death Comes as the End and Appointment with Death.” With two of the three books in this paper, she gets her ideas about where the books will take place from her own travels. The third book, The Body in the Library, is reflecting upon the life style Agatha Christie had grown up in which was the middle class society in England. Overall, Christie shows that growing up the way she did, contributes to the successful woman she became.
Have you ever felt the sensation of curiosity, mystery, or confusion? Agatha Christie brings those emotions to life in her novels. Born on September 15, 1890 in South West England, Christie grew up with her American father homeschooling her. She absorbed children’s stories of her time which inspired her creativity. In “And Then There Were None,” ten strangers are invited to an island, all with a guilty secret to be revealed. As they start to be killed off one-by-one, they realize the killer is among them. Agatha Christie delivers a suspense-filled story with hints and unique patterns in dialogue.
Virginia Woolf’s eccentric style is what causes her writings to be distinct from other authors of her time. The unique characteristics of her works such as the structure, characterization, themes, etc are difficult to imitate and cause a strong impression in her literary pieces. “Virginia Woolf’s works are strongly idiosyncratic, strange, a surprise to ...
Author- Agatha Christie was born in 1890 in England and raised by a wealthy American father and English mother. Her books have sold over a billion copies in English and another billion in 44 foreign languages. She is the author of 78 crime novels and was made a dame in 1971. She was married twice, her second husband being an archeologist whom she often traveled with on his archeological exhibitions to the Middle East. This gave her an understanding of that part of the world, which she used in this story. Agatha Christie died in 1976 in her home in England.
Christmas Eve, 1914, Agatha married Archibald Christie, a pilot in the Royal Flying Corps. They had one daughter, Rosalind Hicks, in 1919 and in 1920, Agatha Christie’s first novel, The Mysterious Affairs at Styles, was published. In late 1926, Archie admitted that he was in love with another woman and wanted a divorce. December 8th, Archie left to spend the weekend with his mistress, Nancy Neele. That same night, Agatha left their home, leaving a letter for her secretary that said she would be in Yorkshire. Her disappearance from the public eye caused ...
Agatha Christie, full name Agatha Mary Clarissa Miller, was born on September 15, 1890 in Torquay, England. Agatha Christie’s mother’s name is Clarissa Margaret Boehmer. She was an English woman who had been born in Belfast, which is now modern day Ireland. Christie’s father name is Federick Alvah Miller who at the time was an American stockbroker (“Christie, Agatha” 176; Kunitz 279).