The Saturday Evening Post is an American magazine, currently published six times a year. It was published weekly under this title from 1897 until 1963, then every two weeks until 1969. From the 1920s to the 1960s, it was one of the most widely circulated and influential magazines for the American middle class, with fiction, non-fiction, cartoons and features that reached millions of homes every week. The magazine declined in readership through the 1960s, and in 1969 The Saturday Evening Postfolded for two years before being revived as a quarterly publication with an emphasis on medical articles in 1971.
Publications of Agatha Christie stories[]
In chronological order of publication.
- 1933, September 30 to November 4 (Volume 206, Numbers 14 to 19) 6 parts - Murder on the Orient Express, under the title Murder in the Calais Coach. With illustrations by William C. Hoople.
- 1934, 9 June (Volume 206, Number 50) to 14 July (Volume 207, Number 2) 6 parts - Three Act Tragedy, under the title Murder in Three Acts. Illustrated by John La Gatta.
- 1935, 9 February (Volume 207, Number 32) to 16 March (Volume 207, Number 37) 6 parts - Death in the Clouds, under the title Death in the Air. Illustrated by Frederic Mizen.
- 1935, November 9 (Volume 208, Number 19) to December 14 (Volume 208, Number 24) 6 parts - Murder in Mesopotamia. Illustrated by F. R. Gruger.
- 1936, May 2 (Volume 208, Number 44) to June 6 (Volume 208, Number 49) 6 parts - Cards on the Table. Illustrated by Orison MacPherson.
- 1936, 7 November (Volume 209, Number 19) to 19 December (Volume 209, Number 25) 7 parts - Dumb Witness, under the title Poirot Loses a Client. Illustrated by Henry Raleigh.
- 1937, May 15 (Volume 209, Number 46) to July 3 (Volume 210, Number 1) 8 parts - Death on the Nile. With illustrations by Henry Raleigh.
- 1937, October 23 (Volume 210, Number 17) - The Dream. Illustrated by F. R. Gruger.
- 1938, November 19 (Volume 211, Number 21) to December 31 (Volume 211, Number 27) 7 parts - Murder is Easy, under the title Easy to Kill. Illustrated by Henry Raleigh.
- 1939, May 20 (Volume 211, Number 47) to July 1 (Volume 212, Number 1) 7 parts - And Then There Were None. Illustrated by Henry Raleigh.
- 1941, 10 May (Volume 213, Number 45) to 21 June (Volume 213, Number 51) 7 parts - The Body in the Library. Illustrated by Hy Rubin.
- 1944, 15 July (Volume 216, Number 3) to 2 September (Volume 217, Number 10) 8 parts - Sparkling Cyanide, under the title Remembered Death. Illustrated by Hy Rubin.
- 1968, February 24 (Volume 241, Number 4) to March 9 (Volume 241, Number 5) 2 parts - Endless Night. Illustrated by Tom Adams.
External links[]
- Saturday Evening Post.com/Guide to the Archive: Agatha Christie. Includes a introductory video.
- Saturday Evening Post.com Archive (requires subscription to view the magazines.