Taste is about so much more than what you eat: Your brain combines smell, temperature, and even expectations to decide how something tastes. Your utensils play a role too, with their weight, shape, and material affecting the eating experience in surprising ways. A 2013 study published in the scientific journal Flavour found that yogurt served on lighter plastic spoons was perceived as denser and more expensive than the same yogurt served on heavier plastic spoons.
Other research found that spoons made of metal, such as silver, can make foods taste better than they do with plastic spoons. And in 2023, one study found that people enjoyed ramen more when using their own bowls and forks, largely made from ceramic and metal, respectively, rather than the uniform plastic utensils and bowls provided. The researchers suggest this is due to familiarity and comfort: Even before you take a bite, your brain takes cues from what you see and touch, forming expectations and helping shape flavor.
Many of the cells contained in taste buds regenerate constantly, renewing every 10 to 14 days on average.
The material of the utensils can also influence the flavor of the food itself. Metal utensils add their own twist: Copper and zinc cutlery, for instance, is more chemically reactive, and the mild metallic taste can boost a food’s dominant flavor, with sweet substances tasting sweeter, bitter ones tasting more bitter, etc.
Utensils made of more chemically inert metals, such as gold and stainless steel, leave flavors largely unchanged. Even blindfolded, participants in the aforementioned study about plastic versus metal spoons could taste the differences, proving that the material itself, not just its look or perceived value, can shape how you experience the flavors of your food.
In the early 20th century, chewing gum wasn’t just for fresh breath. Wrigley’s marketed its Juicy Fruit and Spearmint gums as a fix for heartburn, a digestive aid, and even a way to calm the nerves. And they may have been onto something: Modern studies have found the act of chewing gum can indeed improve alertness and sustained attention in addition to lowering stress levels in certain situations, such as taking a test or giving a presentation.
Scientists aren’t exactly sure why that is, however. Leading theories credit increased blood flow, muscle activation in the jaw and face, or the simple calming effect of repetitive motions. A 2025 brain imaging study found the act of chewing activates regions involved in mental focus and emotional regulation. The effects are limited — chewing gum isn’t going to improve your memory or make you smarter — but it could just give you that little extra boost when you need to stay alert or calm under pressure.
Nicole Villeneuve
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Nicole is a writer, thrift store lover, and group-chat meme spammer based in Ontario, Canada.
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If you were wowed by those glow-in-the-dark stars on your bedroom ceiling as a kid, you may need to book a trip to the Maldives. The small nation of more than 1,000 islands in the Indian Ocean is home to at least one beach, on Mudhdhoo Island, that often glows in the dark — and it’s a completely natural phenomenon. We have ostracod crustaceans (aka seed shrimp) to thank for the effect, as the millimeter-long creatures have the ability to emit a blue light for as long as a minute or more. Though scientists are unsure why they do so, some believe it happens when a “mass mortality” event occurs.
There isn’t a single spot in the Maldives with an elevation of more than 10 feet above sea level, and 80% of its land area is below 3.3 feet.
That gorgeous seed shrimp glow is an example of bioluminescence — light produced by a chemical reaction within a living being. Seed shrimp are far from the only creatures who shine this way: The chemical reactions that create bioluminescence occur in other organisms whose bodies contain luciferin (light-emitting organic compounds; the name comes from the Latin “lucifer,” meaning “light-bearing”). That list also includes fellow ocean-dwellers such as firefly squid and sea sparkles, as well as fireflies, glow-worms, and certain bacteria and fungi on land. Some animals do it to lure their next meal, others as a kind of mating ritual, and still others use it to frighten, distract, or hide from predators. Good thing sharks and bats don’t find the sight as wonderful as we do.
Weekends in the Maldives take place on Friday and Saturday.
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The Maldivian government held an underwater cabinet meeting.
As a result of its low elevation, the Maldives is more threatened by climate change than perhaps any other country in the world. To draw attention to this, then-President Mohamed Nasheed and 13 other government officials held an underwater cabinet meeting in 2009. With the assistance of waterproof pencils and a plastic slate, they signed an “SOS” message — an extreme measure, to be sure, but also an understandable one when considering that most of the country is projected to be fully submerged by 2100. Led by its minister of environment, the Maldivian government has taken proactive steps (including potentially moving the whole country) to ensure that the country’s natural beauty — and its way of life — doesn’t disappear entirely.
Michael Nordine
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Michael Nordine is a writer and editor living in Denver. A native Angeleno, he has two cats and wishes he had more.
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While they’re quite minuscule and often painted to blend in with their surroundings, you may notice several strange, tiny doorswith decorative trim should you ever wander the halls of the U.S. Capitol. Those doors appear to be more appropriately sized for small creatures than for any congressperson, as they measure roughly 30 inches tall. However, they were never meant to be used as entryways or exits; rather, they concealed hidden water sources that once aided in fire prevention and cleaning.
Behind each mini door is a pipe and spout that used to carry fresh water directly from the Washington Aqueduct into the Capitol. The system was implemented in the wake of a devastating fire on Christmas Eve in 1851, which destroyed 35,000 volumes preserved by the Library of Congress. An investigation showed the fire could’ve been extinguished with ease had there been an available water supply nearby, and engineer Montgomery C. Meigs was subsequently tasked with developing a solution.
Members of Congress used to bathe in the Capitol’s basement.
In 1858, six marble baths were installed in the Capitol basement for Congress members who lived in nearby boarding houses with subpar facilities. The tubs fell into disuse by the 1890s, so four were removed. Excavators uncovered the two surviving baths behind walls in 1936.
Meigs installed these on-demand water sources throughout the Capitol, concealing them behind miniature doors that could be easily opened in the event of future fires. Not only did the water aid in fire prevention, but janitorial crews also used those hidden faucets to fill their pails for cleaning purposes. Today, the doors and water sources no longer serve an essential purpose, as the Capitol is outfitted with modern fire suppression systems. But those doors remain an eye-catching relic of yesteryear and are a popular talking point among visitors.
The tallest U.S. state capitol building is located in Louisiana.
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The U.S. Capitol used to have a smaller green dome.
Although the U.S. Capitol opened for business in 1800, its original dome wasn’t finished until 1824. That dome was smaller than the current one, rising to 140 feet above the rotunda, compared to 180 feet today. It was also built from wood and covered with copper, giving the dome a green color far different from its now-familiar white hue.
The wood material, however, posed a fire hazard and necessitated frequent repairs. There were aesthetic issues as well, as large-scale expansions to the rest of the Capitol made its dome appear disproportionately small. A bigger and more durable replacement was approved in March 1855, with construction beginning the following year and lasting until January 1866.
Bennett Kleinman
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Bennett Kleinman is a New York City-based staff writer for Inbox Studio, and previously contributed to television programs such as "Late Show With David Letterman" and "Impractical Jokers." Bennett is also a devoted New York Yankees and New Jersey Devils fan, and thinks plain seltzer is the best drink ever invented.
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Back in 1919, British airline Handley Page Transport made aviation and gastronomical history by serving the first in-flight meal. It wasn’t at all fancy — just a cold sandwich and fruit handed out by “cabin boys” on a flight from London to Paris. Over the next 100 years, however, aircraft meals underwent a variety of changes; in the years after World War II, multicourse suppers were served with tablecloths and real cutlery, a stark departure from today’s precooked and reheated trays or tiny bags of pretzels. In comparison, airline meals of the past look more appealing — and probably tasted better, too. But that may have less to do with food quality, and more to do with altitude. Turns out, cabin conditions required for today’s high-altitude flights affect our taste buds, making even overly sweetened or salted foods bland.
If you’ve ever suffered dry nasal passages or itchy skin following a flight, it’s likely because the in-cabin air is incredibly dry. On average, passenger compartments maintain around 20% humidity; in comparison, the world’s largest desert, the Sahara, has around 25% humidity.
Our sense of taste is heavily impacted by scent, and as many frequent flyers know, air travel can wreak havoc on the mucus membranes inside our noses. Cabin pressure — usually set to the equivalent of about 6,000 to 8,000 feet above sea level — decreases oxygen levels in the blood, which actually dulls the body’s olfactory receptors. The lack of humidity in the air also dries out nasal passages, making taste buds essentially numb, and reducing your perception of saltiness or sweetness by 30%. To make matters worse, studies show that the constant hum of plane engines also reduces our ability to taste sweet and salty foods, though it may actually enhance umami flavors like soy sauce and tomato juice and seasonings like curry and lemongrass. Considering flights of decades past didn’t reach such high altitudes, its likely food tasted better on board, but the trade-off is speed: When Handley Page’s 1919 flight departed, it likely maxed out at 100 mph, a sixth of today’s average flight pace.
German airline Lufthansa was the first to serve hot meals on board, beginning in 1928.
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The first frozen dinners were meant to be served on airplanes.
TV dinners — a postwar marvel known for their portioned trays and quick cook time — became a mainstay in frozen food aisles during the 1950s. But the first prepackaged plates weren’t designed for at-home consumption; they were developed as easy-to-prepare fare for flights. Grocery brand Birdseyeinvented flash freezing in 1925, and by the 1940s, frozen meats and produce were popular with American shoppers looking for cheaper foods during wartime rationing, although entrees wouldn’t appear until after World War II. Around 1944, Maxson Food Systems, Inc. harnessed flash freezing to create prepackaged frozen dinners, which originallynourished hungry soldiers and civilians on flights. (The Navy was a major customer.) Called Strato-Plates, each dinner featured a meat, vegetable, and serving of potatoes, and was meant to be quickly warmed on board. Unfortunately for Maxson Foods, the product never hit the retail marketplace, in part due to financial limitations. Other attempts at frozen tray meals cropped up over the next five years, but Frozen Dinners Inc., a Pittsburgh food company, popularized the TV dinners we know today. Introduced in 1950, its prepared dishes becamepopular along the East Coast, making way for bigger brands like Swanson to pick up on the idea and produce their own frozen fare with incredible success.
Nicole Garner Meeker
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Nicole Garner Meeker is a writer and editor based in St. Louis. Her history, nature, and food stories have also appeared at Mental Floss and Better Report.
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On the western tip of Belgium’s coast, the town of Oostduinkerke keeps alive a tradition more than twice as old as Belgium itself. Since the late 15th century, seaside communities that line the North Sea have practiced a form of shrimp fishing in which horse-riding fishermen, or paardenvisser, trawl the coast’s shallow waters to capture tasty crustaceans. About 500 years after it began, the tradition was recognized by UNESCO as part of humanity’s intangible cultural heritage.
Though sometimes confused, shrimp and prawns are vastly different animals. Shrimp are usually smaller than prawns, are found mostly in cold saltwater environments (prawns prefer the opposite), and belong to a completely different taxonomic suborder than prawns.
But what was once a common sight in the sea’s shallow waters is now a rarity, as only a handful of known paardenvissers still exist. Although the method at its most basic is simply dragging a net behind a Brabant draft horse, the process actually employs some clever physics and mechanics. Attached to each net are two metal-and-wood boards that, thanks to water pressure, keep the net continuously open. A metal chain attached to the front of the net sends shockwaves through the sand, causing shrimp to jump into the trap. As the horse drags the net through the surf, water pressure pushes the catch to the back of the net, which makes room for yet more shrimp. Adorned in their typical bright-yellow oilskin jackets, paardenvissers are often seen along Oostduinkerke’s coast during shrimp fishing seasons (from March to May and from September to November), as well as in June when the entire town gathers for the Shrimp Festival. This two-day event is filled with elaborate floats, costumes, and a parade celebrating the town’s crustaceous cultural heritage.
The only restaurant franchise based on a motion-picture property is Bubba Gump Shrimp Company.
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In 2020, Belgium broke its own world record for the longest time without a government.
OnSeptember 30, 2020, Belgium formed a coalition government 652 days after the last one had collapsed — setting the record for the longest time any country has been without a government during peacetime. This doesn’t mean lawlessness reigned during the long political crisis, however. Instead,an interim caretaker government ran things until an official government took the helm. This not-exactly-laudable world record surpassed the previous record by only 63 days — and that previous recordwas also held by Belgium, which experienced a similar crisis in 2010 and 2011. Although somewhat small, Belgiumis notoriously difficult to govern, in part because wealthier, Dutch-speaking northerners and poorer, French-speaking southerners each have their own political parties and views.
Darren Orf
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Darren Orf lives in Portland, has a cat, and writes about all things science and climate. You can find his previous work at Popular Mechanics, Inverse, Gizmodo, and Paste, among others.
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The founders of one of the country’s leading ice cream brands spent only a pint-sized sum learning how to make their product. Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield became friends in seventh grade, back in 1963. Originally, they set their sights on being a doctor (Greenfield) and an artist (Cohen). But once they reached their 20s — a rejected medical school applicant and a potter who dropped out of college — they decided to enter the food industry instead.
The duo came close to becoming bagel makers, but they realized that producing ice cream was cheaper (bagel-making equipment can be pretty pricey). Their dessert education arrived through a Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences correspondence course, which sent them a textbook in the mail and required only open-book tests. The course has since been replaced by a weeklong series of workshops, the Penn State Ice Cream Short Course, which bills itself as the country’s “oldest, best-known, and largest educational program dealing with the science and technology of ice cream.” Established in 1925, the program has attracted representatives from Baskin-Robbins, Haagen-Dazs, and Blue Bell Creamery who want to improve their knowledge of research and development, quality control, sales strategies, and more.
Ben & Jerry’s has never had an ice cream flavor that contains raisins.
Produced from 1979 until 1991, Dastardly Mash was the lone Ben & Jerry's flavor to ever feature dried grapes. Aside from raisins, the flavor included chocolate ice cream, pecans, almonds, and chocolate chips.
To prepare to run Ben & Jerry’s, Cohen and Greenfield also purchased various brochures from the Small Business Administration, sold for 20 cents each at the post office. Next, they decided to open a shop in bucolic Burlington, Vermont, home to the University of Vermont’s campus (and thousands of hungry students). Their doors opened in 1978 in a former gas station with unsightly holes in the roof that Cohen attempted to patch up with tin sheets and tar. Cohen and Greenfield secured the location by combining a $4,000 bank loan with their pooled $8,000 (including $2,000 supplied by Cohen’s dad). All of the ice cream was made in a 5-gallon machine, and the shop originally sold eight flavors: Oreo Mint, French Vanilla, Chocolate Fudge, Wild Blueberry, Mocha Walnut, Maple Walnut, Honey Coffee, and Honey Orange. However, as the flavors got wilder — think Chunky Monkey, Cherry Garcia, and Phish Food — many more outposts and a wholesale delivery business followed, as did an IPO. In 2000, Unilever — the parent company of Breyers and Klondike — paid $326 million to acquire Ben & Jerry’s.
These rockers helped Ben & Jerry’s create two flavors: One Sweet Whirled and Dave Matthews Band’s Magic Brownies.
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One of Ben & Jerry’s namesake co-founders can barely taste food.
As a kid, Ben Cohen was diagnosed with anosmia, a rare sinus condition that renders him unable to smell. In addition, he has a very limited sense of taste. When eating, Cohen has long derived pleasure from textures. Before helming a business, it was second nature for him to add pieces of cookies or candy to his bowls of ice cream. In recent decades, the signature Ben & Jerry’s item has become a scoop of ice cream brimming with ingredients like chunky fudge, airy marshmallows, and swirly caramel. The company even pioneered cookie dough ice cream, knowing that pearls of batter would result in a satisfying mouthfeel for everyone.
Jenna Marotta
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Jenna is a writer whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The Hollywood Reporter, and New York Magazine.
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For one organ concert currently being played at a German church, every chord change makes international news. That’s because this performance of avant-garde composer John Cage’s “Organ²/ASLSP” is slated to last centuries. In 1985, when Cage (1912–1992) wrote a piano version of what later became “Organ²/ASLSP,” he directed musicians to play his notes “as slowly as possible.” They’ve complied.
There’s a musical instrument made of stalactites in a cave in Virginia.
The Great Stalacpipe Organ, considered by many to be the world’s largest musical instrument, spans 3.5 acres in Luray Caverns. Pressing the keys leads to small hammers striking stalactites throughout the cave, creating sounds that echo and reverberate.
The performance began on what would have been Cage’s 89th birthday: September 5, 2001. A collection of music aficionados, scholars, and former collaborators planned a one-of-a-kind tribute to Cage in Halberstadt, Germany, where the first modern keyboard organ is thought to have originated. They dreamed up a performance that would last as long as the Halberstadt instrument, believed to have been built in the city’s cathedral in 1361. Since that was 639 years before the turn of the millennium in 2000, the group settled on a 639-year concert. A custom organ was constructed at the medieval church of St. Burchardi in Halberstadt. The performance opened with a 17-month pause, and one chord lasted nearly seven years. (Sandbags, moved by human hands, weigh down the pedals to engage the organ’s pipes.) As of press time, only 16 chord changes have occurred; the next is scheduled for August 2026. Private donors have raised money to fund the project, but more is needed for the concert to continue uninterrupted all the way through its scheduled end — in 2640.
John Cage’s famous 1952 work consisting only of silence was called 4′33″.
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“Organ²/ASLSP” isn’t the world’s longest performance.
While “Organ²/ASLSP” is slow, it is not the longest music composition or the longest recital. English banjoist Jem Finer — a founding member of the Celtic punk band the Pogues — holds those world records for his original work “Longplayer.” With help from a bank of London computers, Finer has sequenced six of his short pieces to play simultaneously on a set of Tibetan singing bowls located in the lighthouse at Trinity Buoy Wharf, overlooking the River Thames. The concert started in the first moment of January 1, 2000, and no sound combination will repeat until the final second of December 31, 2999.
Jenna Marotta
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Jenna is a writer whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The Hollywood Reporter, and New York Magazine.
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Whether you prefer yours plain, covered in sesame seeds, or colored like a rainbow, all bagels share one common characteristic: the dough is boiled prior to baking. Boiling is a crucial step that helps gelatinize the dough so it achieves the ideal density; it also partially deactivates the yeast so the bagel doesn’t rise quite as high as other bread rolls.
During a typical boiling period — about 30 to 60 seconds — bagels also absorb salts, sugars, or other seasonings that are added to the water, thus enhancing the dough’s flavor. For these reasons, culinary experts agree that it’s inaccurate to refer to bialys or any other unboiled, torus-shaped baked goods as “bagels.”
Apple redesigned its bagel emoji after complaints.
When Apple introduced its first bagel emoji in 2018, critics derided the design for its plain appearance and the lack of any filling. In response to the ridicule, Apple unveiled a redesigned bagel emoji featuring a healthy slathering of cream cheese.
Experts trace the origins of boiled bagels to Jewish communities in 13th-century Eastern Europe (specifically modern Poland); the technique was brought to New York City in the 19th century by Jewish immigrants. In 1907, local bakers in NYC formed the International Beigel Bakers Union, which worked to guard the boiling and baking process as a trade secret. The union was successful in doing so until the 1960s, when the invention of a new bagel-making machine helped popularize bagels nationwide.
The word “bagel” originated in the Yiddish language.
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There’s a unique style of bagel native to Montréal, Canada.
While many Americans are likely familiar with New York-style bagels, their neighbors to the north have a special variant of their own whose origins date to the early 20th century. What makes Montréal’s bagels unique is they’re always handmade and boiled in honey water to lend the dough a sweet flavor. The dough also lacks salt, which produces less crumbliness and more chewiness.
Additionally, Montréal-style bagels are cooked in a wood-fired oven, giving them a soft and fluffy interior with a crispier crust. The bagels also are rolled thinner than their NYC counterparts, resulting in a larger central hole.
Bennett Kleinman
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Bennett Kleinman is a New York City-based staff writer for Inbox Studio, and previously contributed to television programs such as "Late Show With David Letterman" and "Impractical Jokers." Bennett is also a devoted New York Yankees and New Jersey Devils fan, and thinks plain seltzer is the best drink ever invented.
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Every flag has a story, but few are as endearing as Alaska’s. One of the rare places to have a flag before it was actually a state, the Last Frontier held a contest to design its territorial standard in 1926 — and a 13-year-old won. (The contest was open only to Alaskan children in grades seven to 12, but it’s still impressive.) Benny Benson lived in an orphanage known as the Jesse Lee Home in Seward, Alaska, when he came up with the winning design, which included a description he wrote himself: “The blue field is for the Alaska sky and the forget-me-not, an Alaska flower. The North Star is for the future of the state of Alaska, the most northerly in the Union. The dipper is for the Great Bear – symbolizing strength.” His design also featured “1867” in commemoration of the year the United States bought Alaska from Russia, although the numbers didn’t make the final cut.
Though it’s well known that Alaska and Hawaii are the newest states, they were admitted so close together in January (Alaska) and August (Hawaii) of 1959 that many forget which was No. 49 and which was No. 50. An easy way to remember is to think of them alphabetically.
In addition to being hailed as a local hero, Benson won a watch with his design on it and a $1,000 scholarship. He eventually used that money to attend Hemphill Diesel Engineering School after moving to Seattle in 1936. He was 45 when Alaska became a state in 1959, fulfilling the hopeful description of his design. Alaska kept its flag instead of adopting a new one, and Benson’s work lives on today.
Paraguay is the only country with a two-sided flag.
Just as most (but not all) flags are quadrilateral, most countries’ standards are also one-sided, meaning they have designs only on their fronts. The exception that proves the rule is Paraguay, whose flag has both an obverse (front) and reverse (back). The front features red, white, and blue horizontal stripes and the country’s coat of arms in the center, while the back has the same stripes but the seal of the treasury in the center instead. Some countries used to have two-sided flags, including Lithuania and the Philippines, as did countries that no longer exist (the Republic of Formosa, in what is now Taiwan, had an especially nice one in 1895), but Paraguay is the only present country with one. Here in the U.S., Oregon also has a two-sided flag.
Michael Nordine
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Michael Nordine is a writer and editor living in Denver. A native Angeleno, he has two cats and wishes he had more.
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Agatha Christie’s characters have done it all — survived attempted murder, traveled to far-off lands, and solved mystery after mystery. But the bestselling author didn’t just write about adventure; she also sought it out, sometimes on a surfboard. Two years after publishing her first novel, Christie embarked on an international trip with her first husband, Archibald. Their 1922 stop in South Africa included an attempt at surfing, where it’s possible she may have become the first Western woman to stand up on a surfboard.
The globetrotting couple quickly fell in love with the sport and went on to catch swelling waves off the coasts of Australia, New Zealand, and Hawaii. Christie, in letters to her mother, recounted the tricky experience of learning to surf, describing the sport as “occasionally painful” thanks to a “nosedive down into the sand.” But the writer eventually became more skilled, detailing in her 1977 autobiography that nothing could compete with the rush of approaching shore at high speeds. She also wrote about surfing in her novel The Man in the Brown Suit, in which her protagonist, nicknamed “Anna the Adventuress,” goes surfing in Cape Town.
Hercule Poirot, the fictional detective in Agatha Christie’s mysteries, has a real-life obituary.
By the 1940s, Agatha Christie had tired of her witty protagonist and decided to kill off the character, yet was dissuaded by her publisher. Three decades later, Poirot appeared in his last mystery, “Curtain,” marked by an obituary published in “The New York Times” in August 1975.
Christie’s pursuit of the perfect wave was unusual for an English woman of her time. The Museum of British Surfing suggests she and her husband may have been two of the earliest Brits to attempt the activity. However, they did have regal company: Prince Edward, the British royal who would eventually abdicate the throne in 1936 to marry Wallis Simpson, was photographed surfing in Hawaii two years before Christie rented her first surfboard.
Agatha Christie’s first dog was named George Washington.
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Agatha Christie’s first novel was rejected six times.
Despite her literary success, Agatha Christie’s writing career took some time to launch; her first novel, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, was rejected six times before publication. Christie, who had an interest in storytelling as a child, took her first stab at writing thanks to a bet with her sister, Madge. In The Mysterious Affair, her long-featured detective Hercule Poirot made his entrance, investigating a poisoning. It wasn’t until 1920, some four years after she began writing, that Christie’s thriller was finally printed; her description and use of poisons from knowledge gained as a World War I nurse even landed the novel a favorable review in a pharmaceutical journal. Christie’s first book made such an impact that she even named her home Styles after the story’s setting.
Nicole Garner Meeker
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Nicole Garner Meeker is a writer and editor based in St. Louis. Her history, nature, and food stories have also appeared at Mental Floss and Better Report.
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