Skip to main content

The Mystery of Mrs. Christie by Marie Benedict

What's It About?

"A winning whodunit from the thrilling life story of the mistress of whodunits" — Kate Quinn, NYT bestselling author of The Alice Network

“Brilliantly constructed and richly detailed … a must-read for fans of Agatha Christie.”
— Chanel Cleeton, NYT bestselling author of Next Year in Havana

“Each page uncovers fresh layers of pain, rage, genius and suffering, culminating with
a firecracker of an ending.”

— Stuart Turton, author of The Devil and the Dark Water

—∞—

No one may ever know what really happened to Agatha Christie when she vanished for eleven days in December 1926, but bestselling author Marie Benedict provides a compelling reconstruction with her latest page-turner The Mystery of Mrs. Christie (Sourcebooks Landmark).

The facts appear in the novel much as they are known and are themselves riveting. But just as riveting are the two narratives that comprise the story, one from Agatha herself and the other from her then-husband Archibald Christie, a handsome philanderer who becomes the obvious suspect in her disappearance. Agatha’s reminiscent point-of-view details her relationship with Archie from meeting him at a party in 1912 to a hasty wartime wedding to the unfolding of their difficult marriage. In contrast, Archie’s present account launches the very day he finds out his wife has disappeared — the news tearing him away from a weekend with his soon-to-be fiancée Nancy Neele to go back home — and continues over the next ten days until Agatha resurfaces.

THE MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEARANCE OF AGATHA CHRISTIE

The facts are these. On Friday evening, the third of December 1926, Agatha Christie leaves her home in Berkshire, England, climbs into her beloved Morris Cowley and drives off, leaving her seven-year-old daughter, Rosalind, and the nanny behind. She’s not seen for eleven days, although her car is found the following morning on a steep slope beside a pond.

By June 1926 Agatha had already published six works of detective fiction and was considered an up-and-coming author in the literary world, so media coverage and attention to the case abound. Over 1,000 policemen and hundreds of citizens launch manhunts, and for the first time in history, airplanes are employed for aerial searches. The news makes the front page of The New York Times. With no explanation of any sort, Agatha finally shows up at a popular hotel in the spa town of Harrogate, safe and well. Her autobiography neglects to address the incident in detail, and hence, it’s remained a mystery as compelling as the tales she invented.

EVERYONE IS THEIR OWN UNRELIABLE NARRATOR

There is a telling line midway through The Mystery of Mrs. Christie where Agatha is reviewing her latest story and it occurs to her “that we are all unreliable narrators of our own lives, crafting stories about ourselves that omit unsavory truths and highlight our invented identities.” Archie definitely strives to appear the blameless-husband, something he isn’t, and we find him colorful in his torment, having to deal with the officious English police and even Scotland Yard as each day passes.

In contrast, we watch Agatha judge herself in a harsh and unrelenting fashion as she recalls her courtship and marriage. From the words that begin her story in 1912 — “I could not have written a more perfect man” — much of her self-examination informs our present-day issues despite being a century removed. All women, arguably, must struggle to hold on to their self-worth. While Agatha might have done well to ignore her mother’s old-fashioned advice about putting the needs and desires of one’s husband first at all costs, she still managed to launch and maintain a writing career with books that remain ensconced in our literary lexicon to this day. As for the marriage, her growing realization that Archie is not the man she envisioned leads to her taking the most brilliant and satisfying actions that only a mastermind of mystery and plot could have envisioned (bravo to Benedict for this).

BENEDICT’S OTHER FASCINATING HISTORICAL WOMEN

This is not the first time Benedict has given light to famous women and their lesser-known stories. She illuminated the political talent of Winston Churchill’s wife in her novel Lady Clementine (2020), the scientific contributions of Hedy Lamar in The Only Woman In The Room (2019), and the academic achievements of physicist Mileva Maric, Einstein’s first wife, in The Other Einstein (2016). But with Dame Agatha Christie, Benedict gives Agatha’s public achievements a temporary back seat. Instead, she highlights Agatha’s more personal struggles and shows the intelligence, bravery and focus of one of the world’s best literary writers who happened to be a woman in a very unhappy marriage.

No matter what the truth ultimately was in Agatha’s disappearance, The Mystery of Mrs. Christie is a story as enthralling as one of Dame Christie’s best, and one you cannot put down until the last word of its well-crafted ending.


 

The Mystery of Mrs. Christie by Marie Benedict
Genre: Fiction, Historical, Mystery
Author: Marie Benedict
ISBN: 9781492682720
Anne Eliot Feldman

After a career as a technical writer for the Library of Congress and other nooks and crannies of our Federal Government, she now happily writes women’s fiction, with her first book about infidelity and the second about chocolate. She considers the two to be related in so many fascinating ways but that will be another book.

Leave a Reply