Review: "Agatha Christie at Home"
What a great way to celebrate Agatha's birthday today! I received an advance copy of a new book recently, Agatha Christie at Home, and I'd like to give you my review. Publish date is October 8 by Frances Lincoln, although it's available now from amazon.com.

It has been a great pleasure to read Agatha Christie at Home by Hilary Macaskill. Many books focus on Agatha’s writings, but very few that tell us how she lived. Ms. Macaskill gives us a different Agatha Clarissa Miller than we’re used to. We see Agatha not as an author, but the lover of homes, comfort, her country, and her family. Ms. Macaskill accomplishes this with great success! Ms. Macaskill received invaluable assistance from Agatha’s grandson, Mathew Prichard, and she interviewed others who knew Agatha and her family.
The book is organized in a logical manner, first starting with an overview of Agatha’s life and career. Ms. Macaskill’s research is thorough and she presents us new information. She reveals such facts as Agatha making her own mayonnaise and how she planned her next book’s plot. However, this is not a biography—it is a tour of Agatha’s homes and of the country that she loved so much.
The author takes us on a journey through Agatha’s various residences and their influence on her. We visit twelve homes (before WWII, she owned eight of them!), plus a few more whilst she lived in the
The main focus of the book, however, is how her homes and the home county of Devon affected her as a person as well as a mystery writer. There is a direct tie between her homes and the settings of her books. Her home Greenway has featured in a few of her books and the various locales in
The highlights of this book are many. The color photographs are spectacular, whether of the beautiful Greenway, Agatha’s hometown of Torquay, or the various towns in her home county. Many photographs come courtesy of Mr. Prichard himself—some of which have never been seen before. I love the little insights of Agatha’s domestic life. Ms. Macaskill talked about how Agatha loved to entertain her guests by reading aloud her own stories and playing the piano for her guests. I loved the inclusion of the book’s final chapter, in which Ms. Macaskill discusses Agatha’s legacy. She describes the events held in Torquay to celebrate Agatha Christie, the Torquay Museum and its exhibit on Agatha, and the various film/television adaptations of her writings. The only complaint I have on Agatha Christie at Home is the lack of detail of Agatha’s living arrangements in the Middle East. However, the book’s focus is on her native land.
This is the perfect book for anyone who wants to follow Agatha’s footsteps. For anyone who might not travel to
Five stars out of five!
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