Ten Little Indians
6.99 €
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The novel Ten Negroes is one of the greatest detective works in history. With more than 100,000,000 copies in print, it ranks fifth on the best-selling fiction list of all time - and the undisputed number one novel by Agatha Christie herself.
Agatha Christie is the most published author of all time after Shakespeare. The circulation of her books is second only to that of his works and the Bible. More than one billion Christie's books in English and the same number in other languages have been sold worldwide. She is the author of eighty detective novels and collections of short stories, twenty plays, two books of memoirs and six psychological novels, written under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott. Her characters Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple have forever become exemplary heroes of the thriller genre. "Ten Negroes" Agatha Christie considered his best work. Under this name, the novel came out in 1939, all subsequent publications were printed under a more politically correct name "...And no one became". The novel was the first work with the theme of the "perfect murder", and also served as an example for the creation of many detective books and psychological films, which fully or partially used techniques from this work. It has been screened several times, but only Stanislav Govorukhin's Soviet two-part TV movie fully corresponded to the storyline with a grim ending.
Agatha Christie is the most published author of all time after Shakespeare. The circulation of her books is second only to that of his works and the Bible. More than one billion Christie's books in English and the same number in other languages have been sold worldwide. She is the author of eighty detective novels and collections of short stories, twenty plays, two books of memoirs and six psychological novels, written under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott. Her characters Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple have forever become exemplary heroes of the thriller genre. "Ten Negroes" Agatha Christie considered his best work. Under this name, the novel came out in 1939, all subsequent publications were printed under a more politically correct name "...And no one became". The novel was the first work with the theme of the "perfect murder", and also served as an example for the creation of many detective books and psychological films, which fully or partially used techniques from this work. It has been screened several times, but only Stanislav Govorukhin's Soviet two-part TV movie fully corresponded to the storyline with a grim ending.
See also:
- All books by the publisher
- All books by the author
- All books in the series Backbone. Main trend