Where Agatha Christie Dreamed Up Murder
The birthplace of Poirot and Marple welcomes visitors looking for clues to the best-selling novelist of all time
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Michael Freeman
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Prichard describes his childhood at Greenway during the 1950s as “the anchor of my growing up...I used to toddle down the stairs, and my grandmother would tell me early morning stories, and she followed my career when I was at [Eton], my cricket.” He settled back in his desk chair. “I was fortunate. I was the only grandchild, so all of her attention was concentrated on me.” After dinner, Prichard went on, Christie would retire to the drawing room and read aloud from corrected proofs of her latest novel to an intimate group of friends and family. (Intensely disciplined, she began writing a novel each January and finished by spring, sometimes working from a tent in the desert when she accompanied Mallowan on digs in the Middle East.) “My grandfather’s brother Cecil, archaeologists from Iraq, the chairman of Collins and [Mousetrap producer] Peter Saunders might be there,” Prichard recalled. “Eight or ten of us would be scattered round, and her reading the book took a week or ten days. We were a lot more relaxed back then.”
Prichard says he was taken aback by the 2009 research paper that suggested his grandmother suffered from dementia during the last years of her life. According to the New York Times, the researchers digitized 14 Christie novels and searched for “linguistic indicators of the cognitive deficits typical of Alzheimer’s Disease.” They found that Christie’s next-to-last novel, published in 1972, when she was 82, exhibited a “staggering drop in vocabulary” when compared with a novel she had written 18 years earlier—evidence, they postulated, of dementia. “I said to my wife, ‘If my grandmother had Alzheimer’s when she wrote those books, there were an awful lot of people who would have loved to have Alzheimer’s.’” (For his part, scholar John Curran believes that the quality of Christie’s novels did decline at the end. “Mathew and I have a disagreement about this,” he says.)
Today, Prichard enjoys occasional visits to Greenway, posing as a tourist. He was both pleased—and somewhat disconcerted—he says, by the first-year crush of visitors to his childhood summer home. Fortunately, more than half chose to arrive not by car, but by bicycle, on foot or by ferry down the River Dart; the effort to minimize vehicular traffic kept relations largely amicable between the National Trust and local residents. But there have been a few complaints. “Hopefully the fuss will die down a little, the numbers will go down rather than up, but one never knows. It’s difficult [for the local community],” he told me.
Back at Greenway, Robyn Brown and I wander through the sun-splashed breakfast room and cozy salon where Christie’s readings took place, and eye the bathtub where, Brown says, “Agatha liked to get in with a book and an apple.” In their last years, Rosalind and Anthony Hicks had been too ill to maintain the house properly; Brown points out evidence of renovations that shored up sagging walls, replaced rotting beams, repaired dangerous cracks—and revealed intriguing glimpses of the house’s history. Standing outside the winter dining room, she gestures to the floor. “We did some digging, and found a Victorian underfloor heating system here,” she tells me. “Underneath the flue we found cobbled pavement that was in front of the Tudor court. So in fact we are standing in front of the original Tudor house.” (That house, built around 1528, was demolished by Greenway’s late 18th-century owner, Roope Harris Roope, who constructed the Georgian mansion on the site.)
Stepping outside, we admire the house’s graceful, butterscotch-yellow facade, with its two-columned central portico and single-story wings added in 1823. Beyond a curving gravel driveway, a steep drop-off descends to the Dart. I follow a forest path for several hundred yards to a slate-roofed, stone boathouse, one of Christie’s favorite places, which sits above a sandy strip of river beach covered with clumps of black-green seaweed. In Christie’s 1956 novel, Dead Man’s Folly, Poirot joins a mystery writer, Ariadne Oliver, for a party at a Devon estate called Nasse House—a stand-in for Greenway—and there discovers the corpse of a young girl lying beside the secluded boathouse. The Battery is nearby—a stone plaza flanked by a pair of 18th-century cannons; it made a cameo appearance in Five Little Pigs.
Although the estate inspired scenes in several of her novels, Christie seldom, if ever, wrote at Greenway. It was, Brown emphasizes, an escape from the pressures of work and fame, a restorative retreat where she slipped easily into the roles of grandmother, wife and neighbor. “It’s the place where she could be Mrs. Mallowan,” Brown says. “She went to the village shop to get her hair cut, went to a fishmonger in Brixham, hired a bus and took local school kids to see Mousetrap. She was very much a part of the local community.” The opening of Greenway has shed some light on the author’s private world. But, three and a half decades after her death, the source of Agatha Christie’s genius—and many aspects of her life—remain a mystery worthy of Jane Marple or Hercule Poirot.
Writer Joshua Hammer lives in Berlin. Photographer Michael freeman is based in London.
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Comments (12)
I would love to have a place like this to hide away in and think up murder. She really was the all time Dame of crime.
Posted by cathy on June 26,2012 | 08:20 AM
I love good mystery writers and for me Agatha Christie is my favorite. Believe, I have read and seen all of her work. She has always captivated my sense of curiosity to the point where I would catalogue every word written and analyze them to the moment where I would say to myself this is whodunit. Sometimes, I would be right; however, most of the time I was wrong...she would throw me a curve. I have always enjoyed English mystery writers...now at my ripe age of 74 it still excites me when I can see something new on PBS. Thank you Smithsonian for this write up as I am one of your subscribers, who can literally say your magazine brings me much joy and keeps my curiosity alive to searching for something new to discover and learn.
Posted by Jeannine Forgues-Setterlund on August 22,2011 | 08:16 PM
The subtitle to this article would have us believe that both characters - Poirot and Marple - originated at Greenway. However, A. Christie used earnings from books written about those two characters to buy Greenway. Her original book - a Poirot - was written to prove to her sister that she could write a mystery her sister could not solve. And she did that while she was recovering from a "bad cold" (probably the flu).
Much time, lots of heartache, and financial woes spurred her writing on and that resulted in Greenway - not the other way around!
Her stories are timeless and I would rather watch one of her stories than anyother on TV today. And do.
Posted by J. White on July 2,2011 | 10:44 AM
Yes, it was a disappointment that the murderer in "The Murder of Roger Ackryod" was released. Spoiler.
But, otherwise the article was interesting.
Posted by Betty Norton on June 17,2011 | 09:26 AM
Your headline is slightly misleading. AC never wrote at Greenways. She went there to get away from writing
Posted by ian on June 6,2011 | 08:54 AM
Mr. Hammer (and Smithsonian webmaster),
Thank you for an engaging, informative article but I agree with other posters that the spoiler is problematic. Could you add a spoiler tag before it and put the text in white so it has to be highlighted to be viewed? I expect that doesn't conform to the Smithsonian's style guide but it is better than having people stumble across the surprise on accident. This is an article on Agatha Christie after all; it only makes sense that readers are sensitive to spoilers. It's the principal of it as much as anything else.
Thank you.
Posted by Mike Cherry on June 3,2011 | 10:20 AM
I greatly enjoyed this article, but I was sorry to see that you gave away _The Murder of Roger Ackroyd_. Fortunately, I have already read it.
Posted by Rebecca Wall on June 2,2011 | 04:28 PM
Why report the snooty opinions of Barry Forshaw? Christie was as good a prose stylist as Conan Doyle and created many more convincing characters than he did. Holmes is grotesque; Watson, indeed, an fine character. Poirot is intentionally ridiculous, except for his little gray cells; Miss Marple is a truly excellent sleuth, a quiet, elderly lady, whom nobody notices but who is smarter than them all! Concerning detection, Conan Doyle, for the most part, wrote farfetched short stories; Christie wrote a shelf full of novels, short stories, and plays. In much of the snooty criticism of Christie, I sense resentment on the part of the old boys' network because women were taking over the genre.
Posted by Jim Lacey on June 2,2011 | 03:56 PM
Interesting article. she created her own real life mystery by disappearing..i wonder where she went...and why was there no spoiler alert?!?!?!
Posted by Billybobjofredroidnithersmithersonknerfulbmer on May 30,2011 | 01:50 PM
Gorgeous description of Agatha's house and haven of privacy. Though fantastic and riveting as her stories may be, her life itself is so much more interesting and full of mystery. However, because I have not yet read "The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" (or maybe I have as a child, but can't remember it), I was slightly irritated at having been told who the murderer was. How could you do that to this loyal reader, Smithsonian? Anyway, lovely article. I bet my students will enjoy it, though many may not appreciate the spoiler either.
Posted by Grazia on May 25,2011 | 04:31 PM
An Unfortunate Revelation
May Dame Agatha Christie's spirit haunt author Joshua Hammer (A Setting for Murder) for giving away the ending of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd.
Posted by Donald Fitzpatrick on May 24,2011 | 06:45 PM