Showing posts with label author biography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author biography. Show all posts

Friday, June 28, 2024

Agatha Christie: An Elusive Woman


 
Agatha Christie: An Elusive Woman by Dr. Lucy Worsley  432 pp.

Dr. Lucy Worsley is a historian, well-known to watchers of British television documentaries, of which I am one. Those familiar with her will know she has a slight speech impediment. So I knew this while embarking of the audiobook version of this biography. I'll admit, it was occasionally annoying to listen to but the book itself is a very detailed account of the 85 years of Agatha Miller Christie Mallowan's life with all its ups and downs. Born in the last decade of the Victorian era, she was raised in an upper class household, not formally educated, nor expected to become a "working woman" because that "just wasn't done." With the change to the new century and then the advent of World War I, along with family financial difficulties, Agatha became a working woman. She married Archibald Christie at the beginning of the War and published her first book The Mysterious Affair at Styles in 1921. She continued her prolific writing until Postern of Fate in 1973. During that time she had a child, had her mysterious disappearance, divorced Archibald, and remarried a much younger archaeologist named Max Mallowan while continuing to write and making multiple extended stays in the Middle East. Her writings include novels, short story collections, plays and movie scripts, some under the name Mary Westmacott.. She was made a Dame of the British Empire in 1971. Many years ago I made it a goal to read all of Christie's mysteries which I completed when in my 20s. 

Thursday, May 19, 2022

House of Dreams: The Life of L. M. Montgomery

 House of Dreams: The Life of L. M. Montgomery by Liz Rosenberg, 339 pages.

A reading challenge I'm participating in includes a task to read a biography of an author you admire. On seeing someone recommend this book I realized that, despite having read Anne of Green Gables *a lot* of times, I didn't know anything at all about the author. 

This is a really effective biography. It follows Lucy Maud Montgomery (who usually just went by Maud) from the time she was born to her tragic death. Rosenberg draws heavily on Montgomery's own journals and letters, but also other archival sources, which prove useful for when Montgomery is either not seeing her own life very clearly or is unwilling to admit to difficult truths. Montgomery's story is often sort of beautiful and hopeful, and many of the nicer and more uplifting aspects of it went into her novels (I had not realized how many things in the Anne books are at least semi-biographical). The biography, much like her own books, is also an interesting look into life at the end of the 19th century and early 20th century. It's also often quite sad. Maud suffered a lot of terrible things, both internally and externally, and it can be hard to read how much everything fell apart for her in the later years of her life. I would definitely recommend this book to fans of L. M. Montgomery, but don't expect a very happy story.