- POPSUGAR Australia
- Celebrity
- Ahead of “A Haunting in Venice,” Check Out All of Agatha Christie’s Mystery Books
Ahead of “A Haunting in Venice,” Check Out All of Agatha Christie’s Mystery Books
There’s no doubt about it: Agatha Christie is one of the most prolific and influential mystery writers of all time. Publishing her novels from the 1920s to the 1970s, her stories laid the foundation for much of what we think of when we think of the mystery genre today. There are brilliant private and amateur detectives alongside the “professionals,” colorful casts of characters, plenty of cozy settings, and a ton of memorable characters. If you enjoy reading the genre today, you’re probably enjoying many of the same elements that Christie and her contemporaries made popular!
Along with more than 60 novels, Christie also wrote 166 short stories, published in various collections in both the US and the UK. Today, she is the most-translated writer of all time, with her stories having been translated into more than 100 languages, and the bestselling author of all time, with more than two billion copies of her novels sold (and counting!). Plus, there have been many, many adaptations of her works, including the upcoming movie “A Haunting in Venice” (out Sept. 15), based on her novel “Hallowe’en Party.” Ahead of this new adaptation, check out a comprehensive overview of Christie’s novels, from start to finish.
Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot Books
One of Christie’s two most famous detectives (more on the second in a moment), Hercule Poirot is a Belgian detective who first appears in Christie’s first detective novel, “The Mysterious Affair at Styles.” He has a very distinctive physical description: a short, pristinely dressed man with a distinguished mustache. In his backstory, he was once a police detective in Brussels but now works as a private detective all over the world. Each story places him in a different setting, where he meets a colorful list of suspects and uses his exceptional skills to solve a crime – although some outcomes are more morally murky than others.
Hercule Poirot Books in Order
- “The Mysterious Affair at Styles” (1921)
- “The Murder on the Links” (1923)
- “The Murder of Roger Ackroyd” (1926)
- “The Big Four” (1927)
- “The Mystery of the Blue Train” (1928)
- “Peril at End House” (1932)
- “Lord Edgware Dies” (1933)
- “Murder on the Orient Express” (1934)
- “Three Act Tragedy” (1935)
- “Death in the Clouds” (1935)
- “The A.B.C. Murders” (1936)
- “Murder in Mesopotamia” (1936)
- “Cards on the Table” (1936)
- “Dumb Witness” (1937)
- “Death on the Nile” (1937)
- “Appointment With Death” (1938)
- “Hercule Poirot’s Christmas” (1938)
- “Sad Cypress” (1940)
- “One, Two, Buckle My Shoe” (1940)
- “Evil Under the Sun” (1941)
- “Five Little Pigs” (1942)
- “The Hollow” (1946)
- “Taken at the Flood” (1948)
- “Mrs McGinty’s Dead” (1952)
- “After the Funeral” (1953)
- “Hickory Dickory Dock” (1955)
- “Dead Man’s Folly” (1956)
- “Cat Among the Pigeons” (1959)
- “The Clocks” (1963)
- “Third Girl” (1966)
- “Hallowe’en Party” (1969)
- “Elephants Can Remember” (1972)
- “Curtain” (1975)
Agatha Christie's Miss Marple Books
Christie’s other iconic detective is definitely Miss Jane Marple, an elderly spinster and talented amateur detective. Miss Marple lives in the small (fictional) village of St. Mary Mead, where she both lives and investigates. Although she is unmarried and has no children of her own, she’s always surrounded by colorful characters, including a self-absorbed nephew, a retired police detective, and a series of maids. Her mysteries often take place in more close-to-home locales, although she does have a couple of foreign adventures, too!
Miss Marple Books in Order
- “The Murder at the Vicarage” (1930)
- “The Body in the Library” (1942)
- “The Moving Finger“ (1943)
- “A Murder Is Announced“ (1950)
- “They Do It With Mirrors” (1952)
- “A Pocket Full of Rye“ (1953)
- “4.50 From Paddington” (1957)
- “The Mirror Crack’d From Side to Side” (1962)
- “A Caribbean Mystery” (1964)
- “At Bertram’s Hotel” (1965)
- “Nemesis” (1971)
- “Sleeping Murder” (1976)
Agatha Christie's Superintendent Battle Books
Unlike some of her other detectives, like Marple and Poirot, Superintendent Battle is not a private detective during the time we follow his cases. Instead, he’s an active police detective, and a remarkably good one. Battle is a clever and thorough detective who often gets ahead of his adversaries by allowing them to make assumptions about the ineptitude of the “typical” police detective. His personal life, including his wife and five children, plays a minor role in a couple of his mysteries.
Superintendent Battle Books in Order
- “The Secret of Chimneys” (1925)
- “The Seven Dials Mystery” (1929)
- “Cards on the Table” (1936)
- “Murder Is Easy” (1939)
- “Towards Zero” (1944)
Agatha Christie's Colonel Race Books
The Colonel Race mysteries are Christie’s smallest “collection,” with just two novels focusing on him. The colonel is a character spun off from the Hercule Poirot mysteries, where he’s introduced as a former army officer and a former leader of MI5. With his background in the spy world, he’s usually seen to have an exceptionally open mind to any and all theories, which allows him to solve his cases quietly and efficiently. Along with his two “starring” novels, he also appears as a supporting character in the crossover “Cards on the Table” and in the famous Poirot story “Death on the Nile.”
Colonel Race Books in Order
- “The Man in the Brown Suit” (1924)
- “Cards on the Table” (1936)
- “Death on the Nile” (1937)
- “Sparkling Cyanide” (1954)
Agatha Christie's Tommy and Tuppence Books
Tommy and Tuppence is the only one of Christie’s collections to focus on a crime-solving duo, rather than a single, brilliant detective. Thomas and Prudence Beresford are a husband-and-wife team who work together to crack their cases. After being friends for most of their lives, they meet up after World War I, launch an investigative agency, fall in love, and get married. Unlike the other Christie detectives, they explicitly age in “real time” throughout their series, growing older and raising a family along with their mystery exploits.
Tommy and Tuppence Books in Order
- “The Secret Adversary” (1922)
- “N or M?” (1941)
- “By the Pricking of My Thumbs” (1968)
- “Postern of Fate” (1973)
Agatha Christie's Stand-Alone Novels in Order
Christie also wrote several stand-alone novels outside of her popular collections, including:
- “The Floating Admiral” (1931)
- “The Sittaford Mystery” (1931)
- “Why Didn’t They Ask Evans?” (1934)
- “And Then There Were None” (1939)
- “Death Comes as the End” (1945)
- “Crooked House” (1949)
- “They Came to Baghdad” (1951)
- “Destination Unknown” (1954)
- “Ordeal by Innocence” (1958)
- “The Pale Horse” (1961)
- “Endless Night” (1967)
- “Passenger to Frankfurt” (1970)