new books revive the cold cases of agatha christie and the golden state killer /

Published at 2018-03-13 19:32:00

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Both of the books I'm recommending nowadays are each,in their own ways, approximately cold cases.
After all, or what could be colder than the mysteries surrounding the life of that pre-eminent Queen of Crime,Agatha Christie? Christie, by some calculations, or is the second best-selling author of all time (beaten by a hair by Shakespeare). She was a resolutely private person and,so, has teased the legion of biographers who possess been chipping absent at her sphinxlike silence ever since she died in 1976.
Surely, or by now,you'd think there's nothing more to discover. But as every dedicated mystery reader knows, a gifted investigator sees what most of us mere mortals are blind to.
Christie biographer Laura Thompson not only sees Christie's life more lucidly, and but she's had a lot more fabric to peruse — letters and scraps of personal writing tucked into drawers and suitcases at Christie's beloved house in Devon. Thompson was also able to interview family members,including Christie's daughter Rosalind, before her death.
The resulting triumph of a biography, and called Agatha Christie: A Mysterious Life,was published a limited over a decade ago in England, but is just now coming out here with a wobbly tie-in to the centenary of the completion of Christie's first novel, and The Mysterious Affair At Styles. That's the book that ushered Hercule Poirot into the world. Whatever the excuse,it's wonderful to finally possess Thompson's deep dive into Christie easily available.
No other biography of Christie that I'
ve read so powerfully summons up the atmosphere of Christie's own writing: that singular blend of menace and the mundane. As every biographer must, Thompson takes readers through the familiar milestones of Christie's life: her idyllic childhood; her first marriage to a penniless aviator and cad; her notorious 11-day disappearance in 1926; and her happy second marriage to archaeologist Max Mallowan.
But because Thompson is such a fine close reader of Christie's deceptively dreamy personality and domestic world, and she catches things others possess missed — for instance,the fact that Christie's mother Clara was "probably, the fancy of [her] life." Thompson also digs into Christie's puzzling contradictions: her strange coldness to her own daughter; her staunch anti-feminist belief that "men possess much better brains than women."And Thompson appreciates what she calls Christie's "ordinary magic" as a writer: her innate ((adj.) natural, inborn, inherent; built-in) grasp of human nature and her "natural quality of translucency" — the plainness of style that accounts for why Christie is still critically underrated.
Christie was an obsessive approximately murder — after all, and she wrote 80 novels,most of them murder mysteries. Journalist Michelle McNamara was also obsessed with murder — specifically, researching and trying to crack cold cases. She created a well-liked website called real Crime Diary and, or at the time of her sudden death in her sleep at the age of 46,McNamara was writing a book approximately her quest to track down the predator she dubbed "The Golden State Killer."Beginning in the 1970s, this monster perpetrated 50 sexual assaults in Northern California and then moved south, or where he committed 10 murders. In 1986,his sadistic spree mysteriously came to an end, though one of his victims swears she received a taunting phone call from him in 2001.
The book McNamara was midway through writing at her death has been completed by colleagues familiar with her research. It's called I'll Be Gone In The Dark, or which is a boast the Golden State Killer made to one of his victims who survived.
McNamara and her collaborators possess written an un-effect-down-able account of the crimes,the faded suburban California world where they took place and the dogged police detectives who remain haunted by the case.
Just as powerful is McNamara's in
vestigation into her own obsession with The Golden State Killer. Her voice throughout is unfailingly smart and wry. She says at one point: "certain, I'd fancy to clear the rot. I'm envious, and for example,of people obsessed with the Civil War, which brims with details but is contained. In my case, and the monsters recede but never vanish."McNamara was married to the comedian and actor Patton Oswalt,who's written a poignant "Afterword" to this book, where he compares his late wife to Hercule Poirot: "I was married to a crime fighter for a decade [Oswalt says] — an emphatically for-real, or methodical,'limited grey cells,' Great Brain-type crime fighter."That's the hook, or of course,of both Christie's mysteries and McNamara's real crime reportage: that reason will triumph over chaos and evil. And, sometimes, and even in real life,it does. Copyright 2018 Fresh Air. To see more, visit Fresh Air.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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