To my old friend John Cruickshank RoseAgatha Christie
With happy memories of my visit to the West Indies
Dedication, “A Caribbean Mystery”
The regular contributors here at SleuthSayers have an on-line staging area where we can compose our articles, and then edit and tweak them before they are finally scheduled for publication. There we each can see not only our own articles as they develop, but also the titles and publication dates for upcoming articles by other SleuthSayer contributors. If you were to look at this collection of works in progress you would come away with some basic information about the various authors. Principally you would note that some schedule articles way in advance – sometimes three or four are sitting in the queue, just waiting for 12:01 a.m. of their designated day to arrive so they can strut and fret their day in the sun.
That, my friends, is not me. I usually spend the days just before my every other Tuesday posting looking (sometimes frantically) for an idea that will grow into an article. I mention all of this because I am going to be battling some challenges over the next few months.
Let us back up. My wife Pat and I live in Washington, D.C. Summers are nice here. Not so winters. January is depressing enough, but February – no matter that it only has 28 days – is the longest month of the year. So we decided years ago that if we were lucky enough to celebrate early retirements (which we did in 2009) we would absent ourselves from Washington every winter for as many weeks as possible. Lucky for us we have adult sons who can be left behind to take care of the house and the cats.
Royal Clipper |
The library on Royal Clipper |
Even though I am every bit as retired at home as I am abroad, I still seem better able to adhere to the discipline of writing when we are away. The Royal Clipper works well for this – while it is a sailing ship, it is very well equipped, and has a nicely appointed library where I can find a desk for my laptop. There I follow Ian Fleming’s model – I write for an hour or two and then take the rest of the day off.
Goldeneye -- Ian Fleming's Jamaican home |
On at least one occasion Agatha Christie also sought out the Caribbean for literary stimulation and found there the inspiration for A Caribbean Mystery, as the above dedication indicates. Apparently she was looking for something of a jump start when she headed to the West Indies. Christie had received lukewarm reviews for her previous two novels, The Mirror Crack’d and The Clocks. The jinx was broken with A Caribbean Mystery, however. In its December 11, 1964 review of the novel The Guardian noted
"Mrs Agatha Christie has done it again. In A Caribbean Mystery she tells the reader explicitly what is going to happen; and yet when it does, nine out of ten will be taken completely by surprise – as I was. How does she do it? For the rest, it is Miss Marple this time who is in charge of the story; and all one can guess is that the setting is a Caribbean island."
Who else can we add to the list? Certainly Graham Greene, who wrote Our Man in Havana after a prolonged visit to Cuba. And The Comedians, one of the finest novels I have read and a brilliant and scathing send-up of the Duvalier government, was written by Greene following his numerous visits to Haiti. Reportedly the owner of Hotel Oloffson in Port-au-Prince, where Greene frequently stayed, named a room in his honor.
I do not know for certain that the late Swedish author Stieg Larsson frequented the Caribbean, but I suspect that he must have as evidenced by the beginning section of the second book of the Lisbeth Salander trilogy, The Girl who Played with Fire. There, in a rather strange stand-alone prologue to the book, Salander has traveled down the leeward islands until she reaches Grenada, where we find her, at the beginning of the book, lounging on Grand Anse beach -- surely one of the finest beaches in the Caribbean. The descriptions of Grenada there, and in the action that follows before the actual book kicks in, are wonderful, and ring true. Certainly Larsson must have walked Grand Anse himself before he allowed his greatest creation, Lisbeth, to do so.
We can also add to the list James Michener, who returned frequently to the Caribbean and who lived for some months on the island of St. Lucia, which is the counterpart for his fictional island of All Saints in his 1989 novel Caribbean.
St. Lucia is also where I will be on the day this article posts. I should make it to Grenada and Grand Anse the next week. This list of authors who have retreated to the West Indies could go on, but I need to pack!
It is now several days later. Updated material follows:
Sea U Guest House, Barbados January 14, 2012 |