Come, Tell Me How You Live

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Agatha Christie: Come, Tell Me How You Live (Hardcover, 1983, Vintage/Ebury (A Division of Random House Group))

Hardcover, 192 pages

Published Nov. 3, 1983 by Vintage/Ebury (A Division of Random House Group).

ISBN:
978-0-370-30563-9
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3 stars (1 review)

Agatha Christie was already a celebrated writer of mysteries in 1930 when she married archaeologist Max Mallowan. She enthusiastically joined him on archaeological expeditions in the Middle East, providing backgrounds for novels and "everyday doings and happenings". Pre-war Syria years are remembered here, not chronologically, but in a cluster of vignettes about servants and aristocrats who peppered their lives with annoyances and pleasures.

27 editions

Has a certain charm

3 stars

I have previously read Agatha Christie's crime mysteries but had no idea she had written this memoir until I saw it in a campsite book exchange. Although published in 1946, the archaeological expeditions described actually took place during the 1930s so there is a pronounced inter-war years feel to the book. Christie herself accompanied her husband ostensibly simply in the role of 'wife' but actually took a greater part in the job at hand - cataloguing finds and developing photographs in a tiny excuse for a dark room. As memoirs go, this is a light read and archaeology students will either be disappointed at the lack of detail or horrified at the standards of 1930s digs. I am fascinated to visit Roman ruins on our European travels. In contrast, Mallowan orders his men to dig straight through any Roman or earlier levels, dismissing such 'modernity' in his quest for far …

Subjects

  • Modern fiction