City Library – Agatha Christie’s Old Paperback Stacks, Mukta Book Agency, Daryaganj Hangouts by The Delhi Walla - January 3, 20181 From a private collection. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] She has personally witnessed all that horrid turns of life that newspaper headlines are usually made of — a murder in Mesoptamia, a body in the Gossington Hall library, a death on the Nile, and once she saw a woman being strangled on the evening train from Paddington. Not really — these are all jumbled up titles of Agatha Christie novels. The Delhi Walla just found a pulse-pounding collection of the mystery writer’s entire oeuvre. These paperbacks were packed in three cardboard cartons at the Mukta Book Agency in Daryaganj. Outsold the world over only by Shakespeare and the Bible, Agatha Christie is spotted wherever there are books. In fact, handsomely produced hardbound reproductions of her first editions recently surfaced in some of the city’s respectable first-hand bookstores. But reproductions aren’t the real thing. I’m more excited about these authentic, old Daryaganj Agatha Christie paperbacks, circa 1960s. Better still, despite their age, they seem new and untouched. “I got them from a collector,” says the bookshop owner and second-hand book dealer Ramesh Ojha. The most alluring aspect of this particular Agatha Christie assortment is the covers. The spooky drawings of murders, dead bodies, knifes, ashtrays, lamps, etc. suggesting fear, intrigue and suspense as gripping as her plots. You don’t see such covers these days. So, to hold them in the hand is a great thrill in itself. These editions also bring us closer to fellow mystery enthusiasts who lived in a time when Agatha Christie was still alive (she died in 1976). The bookstore has all the 66 Agatha Christie mysteries — some in multiple editions and covers. Each book is priced at Rs 150. We bought a few of these after bargaining them down to Rs 100. Meanwhile, let us whisper to you who killed Ratchett in Murder on the Orient Express… The bounty of second-hand whodunnits 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. FacebookX Related Related posts: City Monument – Finding Agatha Christie’s Grave, Cholsey, England City Hangout – Best Stalls, Daryaganj’s Sunday Book Bazaar City Hangout – Sunday Used-Book Bazar, Daryaganj City Hangout – Library of Newspapers, Daryaganj City Heritage – The History of Daryaganj’s Sunday Book Bazaar, Central Delhi