Waterloo Region Record

> HISTORICAL FICTION

- Janet Somerville is the author of “Yours, for Probably Always: Martha Gellhorn’s Letters of Love & War 1930-1949.”

The Mystery of Mrs. Christie, by Marie Benedict (Sourcebook­s)

In December 1926, up-and-coming doyenne of detective fiction, Agatha Christie went missing for 11 days. Her abandoned Morris Cowley was found near a small, dark spring-filled lake in Surrey, her fur coat left inside. Her disappeara­nce sparked an unpreceden­ted manhunt that involved over a thousand police officers, airplanes, and the specialist knowledge of fellow crime writers Dorothy Sayers and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Accounts from strangers of “sightings” eventually lead to her discovery. Claiming amnesia, Christie never disclosed her whereabout­s.

Benedict has richly imagined what transpired throughout those days during which Christie reconciles herself to the facts of her broken marriage. Chapters alternate between the story of Agatha Miller meeting handsome pilot Archibald Christie in 1912 and a memoir written throughout 1926 in which Agatha plants clues to her disappeara­nce

Find Me in Havana, by Serena Burdick (Park Row Books)

When she was only 9, Estelita Rodriguez (1928-1966) sang frequently in a Havana nightclub. By the time she was 15, she travelled with her mother to NYC to perform at the Copacabana. There she met singer Chu Chu Martinez and by 18 wed him and moved to Mexico City with their sixweek-old daughter, Nina, forced to abandon her musical career.

Intrepid and talented, Estelita leaves her husband and moves to L.A. with her mother and Nina where she signs a movie deal and works with John Wayne, Dean Martin and Angie Dickinson. The demands of the film industry force Estelita to send Nina to boarding school. In 1958, when Nina is home for the summer and experience­s a trauma, she is kidnapped by her father.

Through the letters that Nina and Estelita write to each other we learn of the chase to extricate Nina from Mexico and the months that follow spent in Cuba during the height of the revolution.

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