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2005: Agatha Christie: And Then There Were None (PC and Wii). 2006: Agatha Christie: Murder on the Orient Express (PC) 2007: Agatha Christie: Death on the Nile (I-Spy hidden-object game) (PC) 2007: Agatha Christie: Evil Under the Sun (PC and Wii) 2008: Agatha Christie: Peril at End House (I-Spy hidden-object game) 2009: Agatha Christie: The ABC ...
Films based on Miss Marple books (10 P) Pages in category "Films based on works by Agatha Christie" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total.
In the 1980s and 1990s Pere published books and curriculum. Her books Ako and Te Wheke have had lasting impact. In later years Pere worked with many people sharing her knowledge about plants, living with nature, and healing. [4] [7] A well-known saying of Pere's is: "He atua, he tangata. We are both beautifully divine and beautifully human."
Agatha Christie as a girl, date unknown. Many of Christie's stories first appeared in journals, newspapers and magazines. [19] This list consists of the published collections of stories, in chronological order by UK publication date, even when the book was published first in the US or serialised in a magazine in advance of publication in book form.
Mātauranga was traditionally preserved through spoken language, including songs, supplemented carving weaving, and painting, including tattoos. [10] Since colonisation, mātauranga has been preserved and shared through writing, first by non-Māori anthropologists and missionaries, then by Māori.
Christie's dedication of the read, "To the two distinguished members of the O.F.D. – Carlotta and Peter", which, according to Agatha Christie Limited Staff and others, references the "difficult time" in 1926 of her mother's death and her husband's infidelity, and where "O.F.D." refers to the "Order of the Faithful Dogs". [8]
Maurice Richardson of The Observer (4 March 1951) wrote: "A bit light and frilly, in parts almost giggly, as Agatha Christie's thrillers are apt to be, but it has the usual creamy readability and a deeply planted fiend." [1] Robert Barnard: "Fairly preposterous example of thriller-type Christie, but livelier than some. Engaging heroine and ...
Black Coffee is a play by the British crime-fiction author Agatha Christie which was produced initially in 1930. The first piece that Christie wrote for the stage, it launched a successful second career for her as a playwright. In the play, a scientist discovers that someone in his household has stolen the formula for an explosive.