The ‘golden age’ of clue-puzzle detective fiction is usually considered to end in 1939 with the outbreak of the Second World War. Yet Agatha Christie, the most high-profile and successful exponent of the form, continued to produce bestselling novels until her death in 1976. This essay examines three novels from the immediate postwar period to consider how she adapted her writing to negotiate a changing world and evolving fashions in genre fiction. Engaging with grief, demobilisation, gender, citizenship and the new fears of the atomic age, Christie proves unexpectedly attentive to the anxieties of a new modernity.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
<p>This article explores the life and enduring legacy of Agatha Christie, the renowned author ...
For years, best-selling mystery writer Agatha Christie (1890–1976) was dismissed as a prolific hack ...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s wartime novel The Corner that Held Them (1948), about a nunnery during the ...
The ‘golden age’ of clue-puzzle detective fiction is usually considered to end in 1939 with the outb...
Review of Gill Plain's book: Literature of the 1940s: War, Postwar and ‘Peace’, 2013
The article deals with peculiarities of characters in the novels "And then they were none"(1939) and...
For too long standard interwar histories have portrayed the interwar years as a period marked by fai...
This article draws on recent scholarship on Shakespearean allusions and crime fiction to develop an ...
In this article, I examine Australian crime writer Kerry Greenwood's first 15 novels in the Phryne F...
This chapter considers the motif of the plunge into darkness in Christie’s postwar works including A...
Similarly to other genres, Britain’s crime fiction could not escape the traumas of the World Wars de...
Women’s fiction, poetry, drama and non-fiction represent the complex nexus of continuity and change ...
The forty-eighth issue of the JSSE contains seven essays and two reviews. In “Coding and Decoding i...
This Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing thesis submission focuses on the literary approach and ...
Agatha Christie, like Jane Austen and John Steinbeck, successfully captured a time long past in her ...
<p>This article explores the life and enduring legacy of Agatha Christie, the renowned author ...
For years, best-selling mystery writer Agatha Christie (1890–1976) was dismissed as a prolific hack ...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s wartime novel The Corner that Held Them (1948), about a nunnery during the ...
The ‘golden age’ of clue-puzzle detective fiction is usually considered to end in 1939 with the outb...
Review of Gill Plain's book: Literature of the 1940s: War, Postwar and ‘Peace’, 2013
The article deals with peculiarities of characters in the novels "And then they were none"(1939) and...
For too long standard interwar histories have portrayed the interwar years as a period marked by fai...
This article draws on recent scholarship on Shakespearean allusions and crime fiction to develop an ...
In this article, I examine Australian crime writer Kerry Greenwood's first 15 novels in the Phryne F...
This chapter considers the motif of the plunge into darkness in Christie’s postwar works including A...
Similarly to other genres, Britain’s crime fiction could not escape the traumas of the World Wars de...
Women’s fiction, poetry, drama and non-fiction represent the complex nexus of continuity and change ...
The forty-eighth issue of the JSSE contains seven essays and two reviews. In “Coding and Decoding i...
This Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing thesis submission focuses on the literary approach and ...
Agatha Christie, like Jane Austen and John Steinbeck, successfully captured a time long past in her ...
<p>This article explores the life and enduring legacy of Agatha Christie, the renowned author ...
For years, best-selling mystery writer Agatha Christie (1890–1976) was dismissed as a prolific hack ...
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s wartime novel The Corner that Held Them (1948), about a nunnery during the ...