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The Murder of Roger Ackroyd. Widely regarded as Agatha Christie's masterpiece, the solution to this Hercule Poirot mystery created an international sensation.
The Murder at the Vicarage. Perhaps more surprising than the revelation of the murderer is the detective who cracks the case. Miss Jane Marple has arrived on the scene, and crime literature's private men's club of great detectives will never be the same.
The Body in the Library, the hugely popular Miss Marple mystery that turns the old problem of a corpse in one's library on its head.
They Came to Baghdad, the electrifying and apropos spy thriller in which a young heroine must take on a Baghdad-based conspiracy that threatens world peace.
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Each title contains special e-book features that are not available in any print edition.
They Came to Baghdad,
for example, offers the lengthy essay "Agatha Christie in Baghdad" — the author's own account of her
many years in Baghdad and the Middle East as a tourist, occasional archaeologist, and longtime resident.

Approximately every six weeks HarperCollins e-books will publish another selection of
special features-packed Christie crime titles. Sign up for the Agatha Christie
AuthorTracker, at your left, to be informed of new releases. Sign up for
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Renowned as the "Queen of Crime," Agatha Christie is the author of over
100 works, most famously her mysteries featuring Hercule Poirot and
Miss Jane Marple. Her books have sold over two billion copies worldwide
(she is outsold only by the Bible and Shakespeare). Most of Agatha
Christie's works have been dramatized for television and/or cinema,
notably Murder on the Orient Express. Christie's The Mousetrap (1952) is
the longest-running play in history and is performed to this day at
St. Martin's Theatre in London's West End. Agatha Christie was made a
Dame Commander of the British Empire in 1971. She died in 1976.

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