Patricia Abbott: The Star Machine by Jeanine Basinger; Vanished by Mary McGarry Morris
Neeru/AHCOP: The Girl in Cabin B54 by Lucille Fletcher; Death of a Stray Cat by Jean Potts
Frank Babics: Bourbon Penn, March 2020, edited by Erik Secker; Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, March 1969, edited by Ernest Hutter
Mark Baker: What Happened at Midnight by "Franklin W. Dixon"
Paul Barnett/"John Grant": The Hypnotist by Lars Kepler (translated by Neil Smith)
Brad Bigelow: An Unknown Woman by Alice Koller; O Western Wind and You've Gone Astray by Honor Croome
Les Blatt: A Caribbean Mystery by Agatha Christie; Sunday the Rabbi Stayed Home by Harry Kemelman; The Yellow Room by Mary Roberts Rinehart
Paul Bishop and Richard Prosch: television tie-in novels
Elgin Bleecker: The Captain Must Die by Robert Colby
Joachim Boaz: The Best SF Stories from New Worlds 6 edited by Michael Moorcock
John Boston: Amazing: Fact and Science Fiction Stories, June 1965, edited by Cele Goldsmith Lalli; Amazing Stories, August 1965, edited by Joseph "Ross"/Wrzos;
World's Best Science Fiction: 1965 edited by Donald Wollheim and Terry Carr (and in comparison to the Bleiler/Dikty annuals, and Judith Merril's, and the one-volume false start of Wollheim's Prize Science Fiction)
Ben Boulden: The Haunted by "Robert Curran" (Ed Gorman), Janet and Jack Smurl, and Lorraine and Ed Warren; The Tenth Virgin by Gary Stewart
Brian Busby: The Darling Illusion by Margerie Scott; "The Voyage to Kleptonia" by "E. M. Scott" (apparently E. Margerie Scott), Amazing Stories, October 1928, edited by Hugo Gernsback, among other Scott work
Bob Byrne: "Have One on the House" by Norbert Davis, Dime Detective, edited by Rogers Terrill
Jason Cavallaro: The Summer That Melted Everything and Betty by Tiffany McDaniel; Best and Worst Reads: June; and July
David Cramner: The Soft Machine by William S. Burroughs
Doug Cohen: Realms of Fantasy, August 1995, edited by Shawna McCarthy
Alan Cranis: The Best of Manhunt 2 edited by Jeff Vorzimmer
my response to Cranis's review of the first volume, since the Bookgasm blog won't accept comments:
Cranis: "From 1952 until 1967, Manhunt magazine was the most popular and revered crime fiction magazine in the USA; succeeding its well-known predecessor, Black Mask." --Well, yes and no...from its first issue, featuring the first fragment of a serialized(!) novelet by Mickey Spillane at the height of his popularity, Manhunt was the best-selling and most influential (particularly on other crime-fiction digest magazine publishers) of the 1950s...but by the turn of the '60s, it was already on the long slide into oblivion. The magazine continued to run the cover line describing itself as the bestselling mystery magazine in the world up to the last, not well-produced, bimonthly 1967 issue, while such other titles as Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine and, in the UK, the London Mystery Selection, all continued to plug along (the other US magazines as monthlies), among other shorter-lived titles, The Saint Mystery Magazine (also monthly in the '60s) and others; Queen's and Hitchcock's are still publishing, and Shayne and London would continue into the 1980s. (And Black Mask wasn't the only crime-fiction pulp to make a big impression before Manhunt made its digest-sized debut...Dime Detective perhaps most obviously.)
Liz Dexter: The Serial Garden by Joan Aiken
Scott Edelman: Michael Dirda; Sarah Pinsker
Martin Edwards: These Names Make Clues by "E. C. R. Lorac" (Edith Rivett); The Case of the Four Friends by J. C. Masterman
Peter Enfantino and Jack Seabrook: Batman comics in the 1980s; Warren Comics, February/March 1973
Barry Ergang: A Jade in Aries by "Tucker Coe" (Donald Westlake); Swan Dive by Jeremiah Healy
Will Errickson: Summer Quarantine Reads: Familiar Spirit by Lisa Tuttle; Dearest aka Jacqui by Peter Loughran; The Midnight Club by Christopher Pike; Wicked Angel by Taylor Caldwell and Night Train by Thomas Monteleone; Nine Horrors and a Dream by Joseph Payne Brennan
José Ignacio Escribano: A Pocket Full of Rye by Agatha Christie; The Case of the Murdered Major by Christopher Bush
Curtis Evans: The Scarlet Circle by "Q. Patrick" (Richard Webb and Hugh Wheeler), Detective Story Magazine, January 1936, edited by Frank Blackwell; The Scarlet Circle by "Jonathan Stagge" (Webb and Wheeler), substantially revised, Doubleday Crime Club, 1943
"Olman Feelyus": The Demolished Man by Alfred Bester; Out of Control by G. Gordon Liddy
Paul Fraser: Best SF: 1971 edited by Harry Harrison and Brian W. Aldiss; Henry Kuttner: A Memorial Symposium edited by Karen Anderson
Cullen Gallagher: Who Has Wilma Lathrop? by "Day Keene" (Gunard Hjerstedt); By Hook or By Crook and 30 More of the Best Crime and Mystery Stories of the Year edited by Ed Gorman and Martin H. Greenberg (2010 annual volume)
Barry Gardner: Mucho Mojo by Joe R. Lansdale
Aubrey Nye Hamilton: Death at the Medical Board by Josephine Bell; A Deceptive Clarity by Aaron Elkins; Nantucket Sawbuck by Steven Axelrod
Bev Hankins: A Client is Cancelled by Frances and Richard Lockridge
James W. Harris: "After the Fall" by Alec Nevala-Lee, Analog Science Fiction and Fact, May/June 2019, edited by Trevor Quachri
John-Henri Holmberg: Jack Vance; stories with a woman as US President
Sandie Herron: The Silence of the Library by Miranda James
Rich Horton: stories of Jack Vance (John Holbrook Vance); Old New York by Edith Wharton; The Rachel Papers, Experience, and Heavy Water and Other Stories by Martin Amis; Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather
Jerry House: Rocket to Limbo by Alan E. Nourse; The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, in five volumes, edited by Robert Silverberg, Ben Bova, Arthur C. Clarke and George Proctor, and Terry Carr; What's It Like Out There? and Other Stories by Edmond Hamilton
Kate Jackson: Don't Monkey with Murder by Elizabeth Ferrars; Murder in the Family by James Ronald; Uncle Paul by Celia Fremlin
Nick Jones: Ripley's Game by Patricia Highsmith
Tracy K: Shooting at Loons by Margaret Maron; Young Bess by Margaret Irwin
Colman Keane: Blood Dreams by "Jack MacLane" (Bill Crider); Bang Bang You're Dead by Evan Baldock
George Kelley: Violence is My Business and Turn Left for Murder by Stephen Marlowe; Science Fiction: The Great Years, V. 1, edited by Carol and Frederik Pohl
Mark Kelly: Sinister Barrier by Eric Frank Russell; The Winds of Time by Chad Oliver
Joe Kenney: The Progress of an Affair by Felice Gordon; Gannon's Vendetta by John Whitlatch
Dana King: Remo Went Rogue by Mike McCrary; Burglars Can't Be Choosers by Lawrence Block; Left Turn at Alburquerque by Scott Phillips and other recent reads
Rob Kitchin: A Philosophical Investigation by Philip Kerr; The Lost Man by Jane Harper
K. A. Laity: Deep Water by Patricia Highsmith (image courtesy Nick Jones)
Karen Langley: English Climate: Wartime Stories by Sylvia Townsend Warner
B. V. Lawson: A Different Kind of Summer by Gwendoline Butler; Five Passengers from Lisbon by Mignon G. Eberhart
Xavier Lechard: the best reads of January-June
Des/D. F. Lewis: The Varvaros Ascensions by Forrest Aguirre
Evan Lewis: "A Gift of the Gods" by Carroll John Daly, People's Magazine, 1 January 1923; "The Dragon of Kao Tsu" by "Sam Walser" (Robert E. Howard), Spicy-Adventure Stories, September 1936
Steve Lewis: The Gold of Troy by Robert L. Fish; "A Proper Santa" by Anne McCaffrey (first published in Demon Kind, edited by Roger Elwood); "The Problem of the Snowbound Cabin" by Edward D. Hoch, Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, December 1987, edited by Eleanor Sullivan; "The Cardboard Box" by Terence Faherty, Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, January/February 2019, edited by Janet Hutchings
Library of America: "The Circus at Denby" by Sarah Orne Jewett from her collection Deephaven; "The Water Baby" by Jack London, Cosmopolitan, September 1918, edited by Douglas Z. Doty
Robert Lopresti: "No Body" by Clea Simon, Shattering Glass edited by Heather Graham
Gary Lovisi: John D. MacDonald's later Fawcett Gold Medal editions
Walker Martin: The Hardboiled Dicks, edited and annotated by Ron Goulart; Black Mask Magazine, edited by Joseph Shaw et al. among its competitors
James McGlothlin: The Best of Jack Williamson
Mike McGonigal: Octavia Butler, interviewed in 1997 (scroll down)
Mike: An English Murder by Cyril Hare
Jess Nevins: H. P. Lovecraft: pro and con
John F. Norris: Harriet by Elizabeth Jenkins; The Woman in the Wardrobe by Peter Shaffer; Poison Unknown by Max Dalman (Binns)
Jim Noy: The D.A. Breaks the Seal by Erle Stanley Gardner
Juri Nummelin: "A Man Called Horse" and "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" by Dorothy M. Johnson
Ray O'Leary: Brunswick Gardens by "Anne Perry" (Juliet Hulme)
John O'Neill: So Bright the Vision by Clifford D. Simak; Tor.com novellas; To Open the Sky by Robert Silverberg; Poul Anderson's novels at David Hartwell's Berkley SF
"Paperback Warrior": Night Extra by William P. McGivern
Matt Paust: The Illegal: The First Mexican SuperHero by Steven Cortinas;
Symmetry: earth and sky by Tobi Alfier
Mildred Perkins: The House of Daniel by Harry Turtledove
Jordan Prejean: The Twilight Zone Magazine, June 1982, edited by T. E. D. Klein
James Reasoner: 14 Seconds to Hell by "Nick Carter" (Jon Messmann in this case); Infestation by William Meikle
Richard Robinson: First Step Outward edited by Robert Hoskins
Gerard Saylor: Rowdy in Paris by Tim Sandlin; The Fort by Bernard Cornwell
Jack Seabrook: "Summer Evil" by Nora H. Caplan, Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, October 1960, edited by William Manners; The Hitchcock Project so far...
Scott: To Man Alone, The Blossom on the Bough, and Summer Cloud by Dorothy Clewes
Steve Scott: "The Golden World of Travis McGee" by Mike Baxter, Tropic, the Sunday supplement magazine in The Miami Herald, 14 December 1969
Robert Silverberg: City by Clifford Simak
Victoria Silverwolf: Fantastic: Stories of Imagination, June 1965, edited by Cele Goldsmith Lalli; Fantastic, September 1965, edited by Joseph "Ross"/Wrzos
Kerrie Smith: Thirst by L. A. Larkin
Marina Sofia: Breasts and Eggs by Mieko Kawakami (translated by Sam Bett and David Boyd)
Kevin Tipple: Crime Syndicate Magazine, May 2016, edited by Michael Pool and Dietrich Kalteis; The Hairy Potter and Other Al Quinn Detective Stories by Russ Hall
"TomCat": Death at the Château Noir by E. and M. A. Radford; The Whistling Legs by Roman McDougald
Prashant Trikannad: Able Team: Ironman by "Dick Stivers" (G. H. Frost?); Sudden: Apache Fighter by "Frederick H. Christian" (Frederick Nolan); Hanging Woman Creek by Louis L'Amour
Adam Wagner: The Last Child by John Hart
Bill Wallace: England's Lost Eden: Adventures in a Victorian Utopia by Philip Hoare; Evergreen Review, August 1967, edited by Barney Rosset
A. J. Wright: Truman Capote's book covers
Mark Yon: Science Fantasy, September 1965, edited by Kyril Bonfigioli and Keith Roberts; New Worlds, edited by Michael Moorcock
more to come...
16 comments:
Very glad you are back, Todd!
Thanks, Jerry. I'd forgotten how much the cats, even now we're down to one cat, ***HATE*** when I try to do anything sustained at the computer.
So glad to see you back, Todd. I hope this means all is well in your household. Thanks for taking the time to do this, and pet the cat for me.
Welcome back, Todd. And thanks for posting the book list. Hope you and yours are staying well and keeping safe.
Thanks, Tracy...I think it's (this afternoon) a strident plea for some more canned food to supplement the kibble.
And thank you, Elgin...well, there are fewer of mine than there were, and with luck no more parts of the house will collapse, as the ceiling over one of our library rooms did, due to a roof leak, last month. But we go forward--hope things are better for you and yours!
Welcome back Todd. My roof leaks too due to a hole caused by raccoons.
Sorry, Walker...looks like wind took off one of our shingles. After a certain amount of time...and thanks.
Robert Randisi, commenting on the FFB list on Facebook, noted: "Walker Martin, two good anthology choices!" (I think he might've been thinking of of Shaw's THE HARD-BOILED OMNIBUS.)
Wow! it is so good to see you back, Todd. Hope you and your loved ones are fine. Thanks for including my posts. Just Neeru will do for my name.Take care.
Yay, you're back! Love looking through these lists.
Thanks, Todd! I'm glad to see this is back.
Thank you, Todd!
Hi, Todd -- Could you put me down as Brad, not Brian?
Thanks.
Welcome back, Todd.
Certainly, Brad...terribly sorry! And thanks to all of you for your posts. It would be possibly accurate to mention feline distraction, but only in the first pass, Brad.
Neeru, will do...it took me a minute or so after the initial typing to realize what the "ahcop" appended to your name in the new web address referred to!
And, thanks, everyone. Knocking the rust off is a slower process than I thought...I had to fiddle for almost an hour to figure out again how to keep formatting in place on the email distribution...
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