You are here |
ahsweetmystery.com | ||
| | | |
thegreencapsuleblog.wordpress.com
|
|
| | | | Am I the only one with an odd bias towards the early works of prolific authors? Not a bias in that I don't like the books after I read them, but in that I assume they won't be that good before I read them. Well, it's probably just me, so let me explain this quirk... | |
| | | |
theinvisibleevent.com
|
|
| | | | With Paul Halter's debut novel The Fourth Door (1987) being the subject of my 500th post this coming weekend, it's time to dive into two more of his short stories from the pages of Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. A young couple in love, intending to marry; the besotted gentleman comes to meet with his intended's... | |
| | | |
theinvisibleevent.com
|
|
| | | | Slightly belatedly, here are my thoughts on the companion piece to 'The Scoop' (1931), another portmanteau mystery written for radio by some of the luminaries of the Golden Age. This time around, Hugh Walpole sets the problem of a dead body found in your typical Stage 3 suburban household, and Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers,... | |
| | | |
jiescribano.wordpress.com
|
|
| | Esta entrada es bilingüe, para ver la versión en castellano desplazarse hacia abajoAmerican Mystery Classics, 2019. Book Format: Kindle Edition. File Size: 1213 KB. Print Length: 304 pages. ASIN: B07Q3Z2D4S. eISBN: 9781613161340. Introduction by Otto Penzler. First published in 1933 by Hamish Hamilton in the UK and by Harper & Brothers in the US. The... |