few very basic questions and possibilities under consideration:
Dotted throughout the Notebooks are dozens of phrases that show Agatha Christie the resourceful creator, Agatha Christie the critical professional, Agatha Christie the sly humorist at work. In many cases she ‘thought’ directly on to the page and there are many instances where she addresses herself in this way.
Sometimes it is idle speculation as she toys with various ideas before settling on just one:
‘How about this’…as she works out the timetable of ‘Greenshaw’s Folly’
‘A good idea would be’…this, tantalisingly, is on an otherwise blank page
‘or—a little better’…firming up the motive in
‘How about girl gets job’…from early notes for
‘Who? Why? When? How? Where? Which?’…the essence of a detective story from
‘Which way do we turn?’…in the middle of
‘A prominent person—such as a minister—(Aneurin Bevan type?)—on holiday? Difficulties as I don’t know about Ministers’…rueful while looking for a new idea in the mid-1940s
When she has decided on a plot she often muses about the intricacies and possibilities of a variation:
‘Does Jeremy have to be there then’…pondering on character movements for
‘Contents of letter given? Or Not’…in the course of
‘How does she bring it about…What drug’…while planning
‘Yes—better if dentist is dead’…a decision reached during
‘Why? Why??? Why?????’…frustration during
‘He could be murderer—if there is a murder’…a possibility for
Like a true professional she is self-critical:
‘unlike twin idea—woman servant one of them—NO!!’…a decision during
‘NB All v. unlikely’…as she approaches the end of
‘All right—a little elaboration—more mistresses?’…not very happy with
She includes reminders to herself:
‘Look up datura poisoning…and re-read Cretan Bull’…as she writes
‘Find story about child and other child plays with him’…probably her short story ‘The Lamp’
‘Possible variant—(read a private eye book first before typing)’…a reminder during
‘A good idea—needs working on’…for
Things to line up’…during
And there are the odd flashes of humour:
‘Van D. pops off’…during
‘Pennyfather is conked’…a rather uncharitable description from
‘Elephantine Suggestions’…from, obviously,
‘Suspicion of (clever!) reader to be directed toward Nurse’…a typically astute observation from
Did mother murder—
A. Husband
B. Lover
C. Rich uncle or guardian
D. Another woman (jealousy)
Who were the other people
During the planning of
Which?
A. False—elderly Cranes—with daughter (girl—Evelyn)
B. Real—Robin—son with mother son [Upward]
A. False Invalid mother (or not invalid) and son
B. Real—dull wife of snob A.P. (Carter) Dau[ghter]
A. False artistic woman with son
B. Real middle-aged wife—dull couple—or flashy Carters (daughter invalid)
A. False widow—soon to marry rich man
[A] False man with dogs—stepson—different name