Tuesday, December 28, 2010

A Christie for Christmas!



When I was in England earlier in the year I promised to be a "foreign correspondent" for this blog and report in particular on my proposed visit to Agatha Christie's house, Greenway in Devon. It has taken Christmas and its association with Christie to trigger my memory on this. I also needed to remember that I had said I would blog about her recent biography so I will finish up with that.



For many years a new Agatha Christie was always part of my Christmas! Well Agatha always said "A Christie for Christmas" so it was quite appropriate. So when I was planning to go to England earlier in 2010 and emails were going back and forth about places we all wanted to go to, I realized we were going to be in Devon. Wow! So I put my hand up for Greenway, Agatha Christie's house in Devon, that I knew had been given to the National Trust by her grandson. Luckily Hazelanne, Maria and Ronnie with whom I was doing the West country road trip were agreeable and what a fabulous experience that was! Well, the whole road trip was but I found it wonderful to visit Agatha's house, see the pet cemetery, see her bedroom, see her piano and sitting room and see Max' artefacts. Though it was never her primary residence and later given to her daughter and son-in-law, so many of the classic Agatha photos depict her there that it seemed very familiar.


You can see the house and and its location overlooking the Dart above as well as a shot of the garden. If you want to see the other photos I took you can check them out on Flickr in my West Country 2010 folder. If you start with this one and go forward you will catch them all.

Agatha was born in 1890 so we all felt that there would be a new book in the lead up to that anniversary. And sure enough Richard Hack's Duchess of death: the unauthorized biography of Agatha Christie appeared in 2009. Hack is an investigative writer who has previously undertaken investigative biographies of Howard Hughes, Michael Jackson and J. Edgar Hoover. Hack has done a very thorough job of his research, focusing in particular on the 5,000 or more documents at the University of Exeter's Special Collections division. These documents provide a wealth of documentation that has not previously been used.

I enjoyed reading Duchess of death. There was much in it that was familiar but often written with a different viewpoint given the sources and it was certainly interesting to get some family views on other members. Hack doesn't care for Max Mallowan and some of his comments about him are not very well substantiated whilst he leaves out other stuff that would have been interesting to pursue. Some don't like his writing style, but for anyone who is a Christie fan, I recommend the book as a good read. Maybe you could get it out of your local library and read it over the 12 days of Christmas so that you get the Christie/Christmas association? I'll be taking this copy back to my library tomorrow.

Agatha Christie's Poirot books came in at number 84 on the Boroondara 150 favourite books list. So maybe you could start your Boroondara Summer Read with some of those old favourites?


Monday, December 20, 2010

Summer time and the reading is easy

The Summer Reading Program.

Dream, reflect, imagine with Boroondara's favourite 150 books!

As part of our 150th birthday celebrations, Boroondara libraries asked you to nominate your favourite books of all time. We have now compiled the top 150 books and there are some great reads among them. In fact, they're all good and we'd like you to read them all!

Our Summer Reading Program features all 150 of the favourite books, which will provide you with plenty to do over the holiday period.

The Summer Reading Program is as easy as:

  1. Picking up your own copy of Boroondara's 150 favourite books and reading log in December 2010.
  2. Ticking the boxes of any of the 150 books you read this summer.
  3. Handing in your completed reading log with your contact details to any Boroondara library branch by Friday 25 February 2011.
  4. Joining us for morning tea and the Summer Reading Program lucky prize draw on Tuesday 15 March 2011 at Ashburton library, 154 High Street, Ashburton at 10.30am.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Boroondara's 150 favourite books

As voted by you!

To celebrate 150 years of continuous public library service in Boroondara in 2010, we asked you to vote for your all-time favourite book. The votes are in and we are proud to present Boroondara's 150 favourite books, as voted by you!

There's a great mix of Australian and international books, recent releases and classics. Did your favourite make the list?

Click here to see the list.