Revised and expanded with a wealth of new material, this riveting
study reveals why Christie staged the notorious episode of her own
disappearance, and how it all went terribly wrong In December 1926
Agatha Christie became front-page news when she vanished in bizarre
circumstances from her home in Berkshire, England. The crime writer was
found 11 days later in a hotel in Harrogate, Yorkshire, claiming to be
the victim of amnesia. Until now none of her biographers have come up
with conclusive evidence as to what Agatha Christie did in the first 24
hours after she disappeared, or whether her memory loss was genuine.
Although the notoriety made Agatha Christie famous, she never recovered
from the intense press scrutiny, and the private anguish that surrounded
the episode ensured that she made no reference to it in her memoirs.
Illustrated with many hitherto unpublished photographs, Jared Cade's
illuminating book provides all the answers, including startling accounts
by the novelist's surviving relatives, that reveal for the first time
why she staged the disappearance with the help of a co-conspirator and
how it went wrong.