By the "Wade Miller" duo...a Suspense novel |
Patti Abbott should be back to gathering the links next Friday, and, as always, it's been a pleasure to spell her. Todd Mason
Mark Baker: The Last Dinosaur by Sandy Dengler
Yvette Banek: Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
Joe Barone: Wings of Fire by Charles Todd
Les Blatt: Mystery Mile by Margery Allingham
John Boston: Amazing: Fact and Science Fiction Stories, June 1962, edited by Cele Goldsmith
Brian Busby: News Stand Library books
David Cramner: Forever and a Death by Donald Westlake
Bill Crider: Mulliner Nights by P. G. Wodehouse; Dragon's Claw by Peter O'Connell (a Modesty Blaise novel)
Jose Cruz, Peter Enfantino & Jack Seabrook: EC Comics for April 1953, adapting Ray Bradbury et al., edited by Al Feldstein and Harvey Kurtzman
Scott A. Cupp: The Chinese Agent by Michael Moorcock
William F. Deeck: Don't Point That Thing at Me by Kyril Bonfiglioli
Martin Edwards: Until She Was Dead by Richard Hull
Will Errickson: Something Evil by Arthur Hoffe (and the cover art of Bob Foster)
Curt Evans: Such a Nice Client, A Swan-Song Betrayed and The Innocent by Josephine Bell
C. C. Finlay: The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May 1964, edited by Avram Davidson
Fred Fitch: The Road to Ruin by Donald Westlake (continued)
Paul Fraser: The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1952, edited by Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas
John Grant: The Prone Gunman by Jean-Patrick Manchette (translated by James Brook)
Rich Horton: Sweet William by Marguerite Bouvet
Jerry House: Tom Swift and His Aerial Warship, Or, The Naval Terror of the Seas by "Victor Appleton" (Howard Garis)
Nick Jones: The Forever War by Joe Haldeman, Galactic North by Alistair Reynolds and many others
Tracy K: Cocaine Blues by Kerry Greenwood (a Phryne Fisher novel)
George Kelley: The Fredric Brown Mystery Library, Volume One: Death in the Dark; Volume Two: Murder Draws a Crowd edited by Stephen Haffner
Joe Kenney: The Strangler by "David Black"
Margot Kinberg: You by Zoran Drvenkar (translated by Shaun Whiteside)
Rob Kitchin: Moon over Soho by Ben Aaronovitch
Richard Krauss: The Case of the Lonely Lovers by "Will Daemer" (Robert Wade and Bill Miller)
B.V. Lawson: Find the Innocent by Roy Vickers (William Edward Vickers)
Evan Lewis: The Maltese Falcon comics adapted from Dashiell Hammett's novel, illustration by Rodlow Willard (continued)
Steve Lewis: Murder is My Dish by Stephen Marlowe (a Chester Drum novel); The Altar of Asconel by John Brunner; Hot Summer, Cold Murder by Gaylord Dold; Android Avenger by Ted White
Colin McGulgan (hosted by Sergio Angelini): Trial and Error by Anthony Berkeley
Neeru: Journey Under the Midnight Sun by Keigo Higashino (translated by Alexander Smith)
Francis M. Nevins: Strangers in the Night by Georges Simenon; The Case of the Shivering Chorus Girls by James Atlee Phillips; The Count of 9 by "A. A. Fair" (Erle Stanley Gardner)
John F. Norris: The Thing in the Brook by "Peter Storme" (Philip Van Doren Stern)
John ONeill: World's Best Science Fiction, 1965, 1968, 1969, 1970 edited by Donald Wollheim and Terry Carr
Matt Paust: The Prisoner of Zenda and Rupert of Hentzau by Anthony Hope
Bill Pronzini: The Pricking Thumb by H. C. Branson
James Reasoner: Lust Shop by "John Dexter"; Leo Margulies: Giant of the Pulps by Philip Sherman
"The Snail Watcher" by Patricia Highsmith |
Kelly Robinson: "The Snail-Watcher" and "The Quest for Blank Claveringi" by Patricia Highsmith (an FFB Classic, which has resulted in BBC Radio interviewing Kelly for a program about snails...)
Richard Robinson: The Fredric Brown Mystery Library, Volume One: Death in the Dark; Volume Two: Murder Draws a Crowd edited by Stephen Haffner
Gerard Saylor: Blood of Victory by Alan Furst
Victoria Silverwolf: Fantastic: Stories of Imagination, June 1962, edited by Cele Goldsmith
Kerrie Smith: A Jarful of Angels by Babs Horton
Charlie Stella: The Running Kind by Craig McDonald; North DIxie Highway by Joseph Haske
"TomKat": The Cases of Hildegard Withers by Stuart Palmer
A. J. Wright: Dan Dunn by Norman Marsh
Frank Babics 2012 FFB review |
Todd, thanks for getting these all together. And for including my link.
ReplyDeleteNot at all, Tracy. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteMr Campion is really "Rudolf K...." Allingham once said he had to give up detection when he became George VI. But she was only joking. :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Todd!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Jack.
ReplyDeleteTodd, thanks for including my post on Higashino.
ReplyDeleteHere's my post for today's Overlooked A/V/ It is a Hindi movie Chowkidar (The Watchman) which I have reviewed at my new blog.Here's the link:
https://aadhihaqeeqataadhafasanaa.wordpress.com/2017/06/13/kuchh-jaane-ko-tyaar-chowkidar-1974/
Thanks.
neeru