The FictionMags Index
Index by Name: Page 19
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[]Addison, Thomas (1861-?) (about) (chron.)
  
    - * Aged Fifty, (ss)  McBride’s Magazine December 1915
 
    - * The Air-Man, (ss)  The Blue Book Magazine April 1916
 
    
    - * Bonga Tong of Tongalong, (ss)  Adventure 1st January 1920
 
    - * The Boss of Blattenburg, (ss)  Ainslee’s April 1912
 
    - * The Boss of Powderville, (nv)  Adventure October 1916
 
    - * Boss Pro Tem, (ss)  The Blue Book Magazine August 1922
 
    - * Bull Luck, (ss)  All-Story Weekly November 10 1917
 
    - * Canned in Kansas City, (ss)  Top-Notch Magazine May 15 1921
 
    - * The Case of Adam Cooper, (ss)  Snappy Stories 2nd June 1917
 
    - * The Channel Light, (ss)  The People’s Home Journal July 1922
 
    - * Chicken Logan and the Flag, (ss)  Everybody’s Magazine September 1918
 
    - * The Clown and the Clergyman, (ss)  Ainslee’s February 1913
 
    - * Come-On Charley  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure July 1914
 
    - * Come-On Charley and a Jewel  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure September 1914
 
    - * Come-On Charley and the Red Sea Fleas  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure November 1914
 
    - * Come-On Charley Buys a Bubble  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure March 1915
 
    - * Come-On Charley Deals in Art  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure October 1914
 
    - * Come-On Charley Deals in Radium  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure August 1914
 
    - * Come-On Charley Invests  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure February 1915
 
    - * Come-On Charley Plays the Ponies  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure April 1915
 
    - * Come-On Charley’s Merry Christmas  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure January 1915
 
    - * Come-On Charley Tries Out Wall Street  [Come-On Charley], (ss)  Adventure December 1914
 
    - * A Creed and a Crucible, (ss)  Ainslee’s September 1916
 
    
    - * The Deserter, (ss)  Munsey’s Magazine December 1918
 
    - * The District Attorney’s Wife, (ss)  Ainslee’s January 1913
 
    - * Educated Sausages, (ss)  Lippincott’s Magazine February 1915
 
    - * For the Flag, (sl)  Adventure 1st Jul,   mid Jul ,   1st Aug,   mid Aug  1918
 
    - * G 2—Defective, (ss)  Adventure 1st February 1918
 
    - * Going Back, (ss)  Ainslee’s October 1913
 
    - * Hick, Hick, Hooray!, (ss)  Munsey’s Magazine March 1919
 
    - * His Home-Town Girl, (ss)  Munsey’s Magazine February 1920
 
    - * In the Cellar, (ss)  New Story Magazine December 1911
 
    - * I.S.O.W., (ss)  The Blue Book Magazine May 1922
 
    - * Jewel Jane, (ss)  New Story Magazine October 1915
 
    - * The Member from Marion, (ss)  Ainslee’s October 1912
 
    - * Mischief-Making Mary, (nv)  The Argosy October 26 1918
 
    - * The Naked Truth, (ss)  Ainslee’s October 1915
 
    - * Nightly Briefing, (pm)  San Francisco Chronicle April 9 2020
 
    - * Nip and Tuck, (ss)  The Blue Book Magazine May 1920
 
    - * On a Business Basis, (ss)  Ainslee’s December 1911
 
    - * The Opal Hunters, (ss)  Ace-High Magazine October 1921
 
    
    - * The Other Man, (ss)  Ainslee’s July 1913
 
    - * The Other Woman, (ss)  Ainslee’s June 1913
 
    
    - * The Peace Hat, (ss)  Adventure July 1916
 
    - * Private and Particular, (ss)  Top-Notch Magazine June 15 1921
 
    - * Proving It, (ss)  Argosy and Railroad Man’s Magazine March 1 1919
 
    - * Raiders, (sl)  All-Story Weekly Jun 23,   Jun 30,   Jul 7 1917
 
    - * The Reckoning, (ss)  Ainslee’s January 1912
 
    - * A Requisitioned Restitution, (ss)  All-Story Weekly January 19 1918
 
    - * The Sacred Spark, (ss)  McBride’s Magazine March 1916
 
    - * St. Anthony’s Vision, (ss)  Ainslee’s May 1911
 
    
    - * Sally Bunn, (ss)  Ainslee’s May 1912
 
    - * Sanctuary, (ss)  Women’s Stories June 1914
 
    - * Sealed Proposals, (ss)  Everybody’s Magazine October 1920
 
    - * A Side Line of Puttees, (ss)  Everybody’s Magazine June 1919
 
    - * A Soap Bubble, (ss)  Pearson’s Magazine (US) September 1913
 
    - * Taking Hostages from Caesar, (nv)  Ainslee’s October 1911
 
    - * A Tale of Old Shoes, (ss)  Adventure December 1916
 
    - * The Taming of Aunt Maria, (ss)  Lippincott’s Magazine May 1915
 
    - * Terrible Twenty, (ss)  Argosy June 28 1919
 
    - * That Great Coconut Drive, (nv)  Top-Notch Magazine April 1 1921
 
    - * Too Much Business, (ss)  Adventure March 1916
 
    - * The Tower Man, (ss)  McBride’s Magazine April 1916
 
    - * Tricks in All Trades, (ss)  Everybody’s Magazine April 1920
 
    - * Tumultuous Tommy, (ss)  The Blue Book Magazine December 1918
 
    - * Twenty-Per-Cent. Potter, (ss)  Everybody’s Magazine May 1919
 
    - * Two Innocents Abroad, (ss)  The Blue Book Magazine September 1916
 
    - * Under the Rose, (ss)  The Argosy August 31 1918
 
    - * The Waster, (ss)  Munsey’s Magazine August 1921
 
    - * The Whip Hand, (ss)  Adventure June 1915
 
    - * Whose Fault?, (ss)  The Red Book Magazine April 1916
 
    
    - * The Winner, (ss)  Adventure January 1916
 
  
[]Addleman, David R. (fl. 1990s) (chron.)
  
    - * Aaron Silversmith, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v3 #1, 1993
 
    - * Artifact, (ss)  Gateways #11, Summer 1994
 
    - * The Beltsweeper, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v3 #6, 1993
 
    - * Bright Cries in the Darkness, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v3 #1, 1993
 
    - * Bubbles, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v2 #3, 1992
 
    - * Changes, (ss)  Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Fantasy Magazine Winter 1992
 
    - * Code of the Vampire, (ss)  Figment #15, Fall 1993
 
    - * Devil Dues, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v3 #10, 1993
 
    - * Family Ties, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v1 #5, 1991
 
    - * A Few Watts Between Friends, (ss)  Vision #14, 1992
 
    - * First Times Are Often Painful, (vi)  Aberations #6, 1992
 
    - * Flip Out, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v3 #9, 1993
 
    - * The Ghost in the Well, (ss)  Talebones #0, Summer 1995
 
    - * Ghostly Intent, (ss)  Aberrations #19, April 1994
 
    - * The Guardian, (vi)  Vision #17, 1993
 
    - * In His Hands, (ss)  Vision #18, 1994
 
    - * Kiddie War, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v2 #1, 1992
 
    - * The Last Hero, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v1 #4, 1991
 
    - * The Last Vampire, (vi)  Midnight Zoo v1 #5, 1991
 
    - * The Lipton People, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v1 #2, 1991
 
    - * Little Blonde Angel, (ss)  Over My Dead Body! #1, Summer 1993
 
    - * Pillow Beasts, (vi)  Midnight Zoo v2 #2, 1992
 
    
    - * Prime Diective, (ss)  Vision #12, 1992
 
    - * Reflections of Youth, (ss)  Figment #14, Summer 1993
 
    - * Requiem for a Vampire, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v2 #4, 1992
 
    - * Silvery Eyed Devil, (ss)  Vision #11, 1991
 
    - * So Long to Love, (ss)  The Vampire’s Crypt #6, Fall 1992
 
    - * Telesport, (ss)  Aberations #8, 1993
 
    - * Time of the Beast, (ss)  Aberations #1, 1991
 
    - * Tokens of Faith, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v1 #6, 1991
 
    - * You Send Me, (ss)  Midnight Zoo v3 #7, 1993
 
  
_____, [ref.]
  
[]Addonizio, Kim; [born Kim Addie] (1954- ) (about) (chron.)
  
    - * Ever After, (ss)  Fairy Tale Review #1, 2005
 
    
    - * The Gift, (ss)  A Dick for a Day: What Would You Do If You Had One? ed. Fiona Giles, Indigo, 1997
 
    - * Girlfriends, (pp)  The New Yorker July 21 2025
 
    - * Hansel, (ss)  Fairy Tale Review v5 #1, 2009
 
    - * Just Do What I Tell You, (ss)  Eros ex Machina ed. M. Christian, Masquerade/Rhinoceros, 1998
 
    - * Kansas, 4 A.M., (pm)  The New Yorker April 17 2023
 
    - * A Proper Funeral, (ss)  The Sun #476, August 2015
 
    - * Snow White: The Huntsman’s Story, (ss)  Fairy Tale Review v3 #1, 2007
 
    - * Thirty  [Bedtime Stories], (ss)  Penthouse (US) December 1996
 
    - * ‘Til There Was You, (ss) 
 
    
    - * Ways of Being Lonely, (pm)  The New Yorker November 16 2020
 
    - * The Wishing Well, (ss)  Oakland Noir ed. Eddie Muller & Jerry Thompson, Akashic Books, 2017
 
  
[]Ade, George (1866-1944) (about) (chron.)
  
    - * Alibis, (cl)  Cosmopolitan May 1924
 
    - * And Now They Are Famous, (cl)  Cosmopolitan January 1927 [Ref. Will J. Davis, Charles Dillingham, Eugene Field & Frank A. Vanderlip]
 
    - * Are You Headed Up—or Down?, (ed)  Cosmopolitan January 1922
 
    - * At the Quarter, (ar)  Liberty January 3 1925
 
    - * Authors!—Burn Up Your Alibis!, (hu)  Photoplay September 1923
 
    - * Babies, (ed)  Cosmopolitan February 1922
 
    - * A Bachelor’s Advice to Parents, (cl)  Hearst’s International November 1924
 
    - * The Backslider, (ss)  Collier’s December 11 1909
 
    - * A Boarding House Drama, (ss)  10 Story Book January 1903
 
    - * Bread Upon the Waters, (ed)  Cosmopolitan May 1923
 
    - * The Breaking-In of Quincy Bolivar, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post May 23 1903
 
    - * The Busy Boiling 90’s, (cl)  Cosmopolitan November 1926
 
    - * The Charles Frohman Way, (ar)  Cosmopolitan October 1915 [Ref. Charles Frohman]
 
    - * The Charm of the Big Town, (ar)  Metropolitan Magazine February 1904
 
    - * Climate, (ed)  Cosmopolitan January 1923
 
    - * College Men & Newspaper Work, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post April 13 1901
 
    - * The College Widow, (pm)  1900
 
    
    - * Comparisons, (ed)  Cosmopolitan November 1921
 
    - * Consistency, (ed)  Cosmopolitan November 1923
 
    - * Copy Cats, (ed)  Cosmopolitan June 1924
 
    - * The Dark Ages, (cl)  Cosmopolitan August 1926
 
    - * Dashing Up the Nile in Company of Mr. Peasley and Others, (ss)  The Idler April 1907
 
    - * The Dead One on a Pedestal Is a Statue the Live One Is a Target, (ed)  Cosmopolitan October 1922
 
    - * Dignity, (ed)  Cosmopolitan March 1921
 
    - * Do You Live in a Tree? Or Do You Carry a Ton of Non-Essentials Under Each Arm?, (ed)  Cosmopolitan June 1921
 
    - * The Dream That Came Out with Much to Boot, (ss)  Cosmopolitan May 1913
 
    - * The Fable of a Few Dropping In, (ss)  Liberty September 19 1925
 
    - * The Fable of All That Triangle Stuff as Sized Up by the Meal-Ticket, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1917
 
    - * The Fable of Almost Getting Back to Nature, (vi)  Cosmopolitan September 1918
 
    - * The Fable of Doing Just as You Please, (ss) 
 
    
    - * The Fable of Life Among the Lollipops, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1930
 
    - * Fable of Parents Who Tampered with Offspring, (vi)  1899
 
    
    - * The Fable of Prince Fortunatus Who Moved Away from Easy Street and Sisas the Saver Who Moved In, (ss)  Cosmopolitan June 1916
 
    - * The Fable of the Back-Tracker from the Hot Sidewalks, (ss)  Cosmopolitan November 1915
 
    - * The Fable of the Bewildered Maverick and the Conflicting Testamony, (ss)  Cosmopolitan February 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Brand That Was Plucked and Got Cold, (vi)  Cosmopolitan September 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Brotherly Confab, (ar)  Liberty October 10 1925
 
    - * The Fable of the Civic Improver and the Customary Reward, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1916
 
    - * The Fable of the Compound Fracture and the Rapid Recovery, (vi)  Cosmopolitan September 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Cousins Who Got Together Much and Plenty, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1920
 
    - * The Fable of the Family That Forgot That Folks Remember, (ss)  Cosmopolitan June 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Film-Fed Family, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1915
 
    - * The Fable of the Getting-Together of the Lily and the Hick, (ss)  Cosmopolitan August 1917
 
    - * The Fable of the Good Fairy with the Lorgnette, and Why She Got It Good, (vi)  Fables in Slang by George Ade, Herbert S. Stow, 1900
 
    
    - * The Fable of the Hard-Up Yeoman Who Went on a Visit, (ss)  Cosmopolitan May 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Hostess and the Hikers and the Party Under the Trees, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1919
 
    - * The Fable of the Inside Info and the Deadly Dope, (vi)  Cosmopolitan September 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Kittenish Superanns and the World-Weary Snipes, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1916
 
    - * The Fable of the Lingering Thirst and Boundless Sahara, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1917
 
    - * The Fable of the Man Who Wanted His Europe, (ss)  Cosmopolitan May 1915
 
    - * The Fable of the New Indirect Lighting System, (vi)  Cosmopolitan September 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Pippinella and the Holder of the Lucky Ticket, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1920
 
    - * The Fable of the Polite Poison Counter, (ss)  Cosmopolitan December 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Preacher Who Flew His Kite, (vi)  1900
 
    
    - * The Fable of the Ripe Persimmon and the Plucked Flower, (ss)  Cosmopolitan April 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Rise and Flight of the Winged Insect, (ss)  Cosmopolitan December 1917
 
    - * The Fable of the Slim Girl, (vi) 
 
    
    - * The Fable of the Song-Bird and the Cyclone, (vi)  Cosmopolitan September 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Straight and Narrow Path Leading to the Refreshment Counter, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Things We Can’t Get Along Without Unless—, (ss)  Cosmopolitan November 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Twelve-Cylinder Speed of the Leisure Class, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1916
 
    - * The Fable of the Two Mandolin Players and the Willing Performer, (ss)  Fables in Slang by George Ade, Herbert S. Stow, 1900
 
    
    - * The Fable of the Two Sensational Failures, (ss)  Cosmopolitan April 1915
 
    - * The Fable of the Uplift That Moved Sideways, (ss)  Cosmopolitan March 1918
 
    - * The Fable of the Wailing in the Desert, (ss)  Cosmopolitan August 1920
 
    - * The Fable of the Waist-Band That Was Taut Up to the Moment It Gave Way, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1917
 
    - * The Fable of the Week-Enders and the Dreadful Doings, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1918
 
    - * The Fable of Those Who Stood the Gaff and Smiled or Otherwise, (ss)  Cosmopolitan August 1918
 
    - * The Fable of What Showed Up in the Red Glare, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1918
 
    - * The Fable of What the Best People Are Not Doing, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1915
 
    - * The Fable of What They Hankered for and What Was Delivered to Them, (ss)  Cosmopolitan November 1917
 
    - * The First Night, (ss)  Collier’s June 16 1906
 
    - * Food Fit for Heaven, (cl)  Cosmopolitan June 1926
 
    - * Football Now and Then, (ar)  Liberty November 16 1929
 
    - * For the First Time in My Life I’m Going to Talk About Myself, (cl)  Cosmopolitan June 1925
 
    - * The Funniest Stories I’ve Heard, (hu)  Success Magazine November 1906
 
    - * The Funniest Stories I’ve Heard, (hu)  The Busy Man’s Magazine December 1906
 
    - * Geographical Labels, (ed)  Cosmopolitan July 1923
 
    - * Getting Acquainted with the English Language, (ar)  The Idler May 1907
 
    
    - * Getting Even, (cl)  Cosmopolitan July 1924
 
    - * Getting Sister Laura Married Off, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post July 18 1903
 
    - * The Glory of the States:
    
    * ___ 3. Indiana, (ar)  The American Magazine March 1916
    - * The Good Die Young, (cl)  Cosmopolitan August 1924
 
    - * The Good Old Days, (ar)  Cosmopolitan October 1925
 
    - * Goose Grease for Happiness, (cl)  Cosmopolitan September 1924
 
    - * Great Ones, (cl)  Cosmopolitan June 1927
 
    - * Handsome Cyril, (ss)  Handsome Cyril by George Ade, Bandar Log Press, 1903
 
    
    - * The Hardest $100,000 That I Ever Earned, (ar)  Cosmopolitan November 1925
 
    - * Have You a Well-Meaning Fixer in Your Home?, (ed)  Cosmopolitan December 1921
 
    - * He Will Save Her, (ss)  Cosmopolitan April 1928
 
    - * Hokum, (ed)  Cosmopolitan April 1923
 
    - * Home Cooking, (ed)  Cosmopolitan June 1922
 
    - * How I Came to Butt Into the Drama, (ar)  Pearson’s Magazine (US) November 1904
 
    - * How to Live in the Country, (ar)  Cosmopolitan January 1926
 
    - * Human Failings of Ancient Moguls, (ar)  The Busy Man’s Magazine July 1906
 
    - * A Humorist’s Visit to the Pyramids, (ar)  The Busy Man’s Magazine June 1906
 
    - * The Humorous Side of an Ocean Voyage, (ar)  The Busy Man’s Magazine May 1906
 
    - * If!, (cl)  Cosmopolitan December 1924
 
    - * I Keep Myself Young, (ar)  Cosmopolitan February 1926
 
    - * I Knew Them When—, (cl)  Cosmopolitan December 1926
 
    - * I Like Crowds, (cl)  Cosmopolitan May 1926
 
    - * Indiana, (ar)  The American Magazine March 1916
 
    - * Interior Desecrating, (cl)  Cosmopolitan February 1925
 
    - * Jazzmania, (cl)  Cosmopolitan January 1925
 
    - * Jewelry, (ed)  Cosmopolitan October 1923
 
    - * The Joy of Single Blessedness, (ar) 
 
    
    - * Lady Champions, (ar)  Cosmopolitan August 1927
 
    - * A Life Job—But Who Wants It?, (ed)  Cosmopolitan October 1921
 
    - * A Life on the Ocean Wave, (ss)  The Idler November 1906
 
    - * The Little Men Are the Big Folks, (cl)  Cosmopolitan March 1925
 
    - * A Little Scheme of My Own, (cl)  Cosmopolitan July 1926
 
    - * Loafer’s Lullaby, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1931
 
    - * Log Cabin Days, (ar)  Cosmopolitan April 1926
 
    - * Looking Back from 50, (ar)  The American Magazine February 1917
 
    - * “Look Out for Your Husbands! Golf Is Coming!”, (ar)  The American Magazine July 1920
 
    - * The Lovemaking of a Prince, (ss)  10 Story Book June 1901
 
    
    - * Luck, (ed)  Cosmopolitan September 1923
 
    - * Luxuries, (ed)  Cosmopolitan April 1922
 
    - * Making the Grade, (ss)  Cosmopolitan March 1928
 
    - * Maple Syrup and Cayenne Pepper, (ed)  Cosmopolitan March 1923
 
    - * The Microbe’s Serenade, (pm) 
 
    
    - * Mr. Peasley and His Vivid Impressions of Foreign Parts, (ss)  The Idler January 1907
 
    - * Mr. Peasley Goes Into the Pyramid of Cheops and Lives to Tell About It, (ss)  The Idler March 1907
 
    - * Mr. Peasley Stories:
    
    * ___ 1. With Mr. Peasley in Darkest London, (ss)  The Idler December 1906
    
    * ___ 2. Mr. Peasley and His Vivid Impressions of Foreign Parts, (ss)  The Idler January 1907
    
    * ___ 3. Round About Cairo with or Without the Assistance of the Dragoman or Simon Legree of the Orient, (ss)  The Idler February 1907
    
    * ___ 4. Mr. Peasley Goes Into the Pyramid of Cheops and Lives to Tell About It, (ss)  The Idler March 1907
    
    * ___ 5. Dashing Up the Nile in Company of Mr. Peasley and Others, (ss)  The Idler April 1907
    - * The Modern Fable of the Bureau of Public Comfort, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly November 17 1900
 
    - * The Modern Fable of the Good Fellow Who Had a Way of Getting the Short End of It, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 1 1900
 
    - * Modern Fable of the Old Fox and the Young Fox, (ss)  The Century Magazine March 1902
 
    - * The Modern Fable of the Old Merchant, the Sleuth, and the Tapioca, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 29 1900
 
    - * The Modern Fable of the Old-Time Pedagogue Who Came Down from the Shelf and Was Sufficiently Bumped, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 8 1900
 
    - * The Modern Fable of the People’s Choice, Who Answered the Call of Duty and Took Seltzer, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly November 10 1900
 
    - * The Modern Fable of the Satiated Globe-Trotter Who Found a New Kind of Nerve-Twister Waiting for Him at Home, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 22 1900
 
    - * The Modern Fable of the Skittish Widower Who Tried to Set Himself Back Some Thirty Years, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly November 24 1900
 
    - * The Modern Fable of the Spotlighters and the Spotter, (ss)  Cosmopolitan February 1917
 
    - * The Modern Fable of the Weak Brother Who Made People Think of Lord Chesterfield, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 15 1900
 
    - * The Modern Fable of What They Had Laid Out for Their Vacation, (vi)  Duluth Evening Herald May 24 1902
 
    
    - * Modern Fables:
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the Bureau of Public Comfort, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly November 17 1900
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the Good Fellow Who Had a Way of Getting the Short End of It, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 1 1900
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the Old Merchant, the Sleuth, and the Tapioca, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 29 1900
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the Old-Time Pedagogue Who Came Down from the Shelf and Was Sufficiently Bumped, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 8 1900
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the People’s Choice, Who Answered the Call of Duty and Took Seltzer, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly November 10 1900
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the Satiated Globe-Trotter Who Found a New Kind of Nerve-Twister Waiting for Him at Home, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 22 1900
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the Skittish Widower Who Tried to Set Himself Back Some Thirty Years, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly November 24 1900
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the Weak Brother Who Made People Think of Lord Chesterfield, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 15 1900
    - * More Cruel Than Whips, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1931
 
    - * A Mosquito Fleet of Undersized Chasers and Destroyers, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1917
 
    - * Mourns That Funerals Aren’t What They Used to Be, (ed)  Cosmopolitan November 1922
 
    - * Move Around Before the Ivy Begins to Climb Up Your Legs. A Vacation Editorial, (ed)  Cosmopolitan July 1921
 
    - * The Mushy Seventies, (cl)  Cosmopolitan September 1926
 
    - * Music and Music-Lovers, (ed)  Cosmopolitan April 1921
 
    - * My Mother and Father, (ar)  Cosmopolitan March 1926
 
    - * My Own All-American Team, (ar)  Cosmopolitan May 1927
 
    - * The New Fable of Susan and the Daughter and the Granddaughter, and Then Something Really Grand, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1913
 
    - * The New Fable of the Aerial Performer, the Buzzing Blondine, and the Daughter of Mr. Jackson, (ss)  Cosmopolitan August 1913
 
    - * The New Fable of the Father Who Jumped In, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine January 1913
 
    - * The New Fable of the Intermittent Fusser, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine October 1912
 
    - * The New Fable of the Lonesome Camp on the Frozen Heights, (ss)  Cosmopolitan December 1913
 
    - * The New Fable of the Marathon in the Mud and the Laurel Wreath, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1914
 
    - * The New Fable of the Private Agitator and What He Cooked Up, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine August 1912
 
    - * The New Fable of the Scoffer Who Fell Hard and the Woman Sitting By, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1913
 
    - * The New Fable of the Search for Climate, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine November 1912
 
    - * The New Fable of the Speedy Sprite, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine September 1912
 
    - * The New Fable of the Toilsome Ascent and the Shining Table Land, (ss)  Cosmopolitan June 1913
 
    - * The New Fable of the Uplifter and His Dandy Little Opus, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine February 1913
 
    - * The New Fable of the Wandering Boy and the Wayward Parents, (ss)  Cosmopolitan March 1913
 
    - * The New Fable of What Transpires After the Wind-up, (ss)  Cosmopolitan April 1913
 
    - * New Fables in Slang, (gp)  Cosmopolitan September 1918
 
    * ___ The Dream That Came Out with Much to Boot, (ss)  Cosmopolitan May 1913
    
    * ___ The Fable of All That Triangle Stuff as Sized Up by the Meal-Ticket, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1917
    
    * ___ The Fable of Prince Fortunatus Who Moved Away from Easy Street and Sisas the Saver Who Moved In, (ss)  Cosmopolitan June 1916
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Back-Tracker from the Hot Sidewalks, (ss)  Cosmopolitan November 1915
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Bewildered Maverick and the Conflicting Testamony, (ss)  Cosmopolitan February 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Civic Improver and the Customary Reward, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1916
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Cousins Who Got Together Much and Plenty, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1920
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Family That Forgot That Folks Remember, (ss)  Cosmopolitan June 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Film-Fed Family, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1915
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Getting-Together of the Lily and the Hick, (ss)  Cosmopolitan August 1917
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Hard-Up Yeoman Who Went on a Visit, (ss)  Cosmopolitan May 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Hostess and the Hikers and the Party Under the Trees, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1919
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Kittenish Superanns and the World-Weary Snipes, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1916
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Lingering Thirst and Boundless Sahara, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1917
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Man Who Wanted His Europe, (ss)  Cosmopolitan May 1915
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Pippinella and the Holder of the Lucky Ticket, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1920
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Polite Poison Counter, (ss)  Cosmopolitan December 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Ripe Persimmon and the Plucked Flower, (ss)  Cosmopolitan April 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Rise and Flight of the Winged Insect, (ss)  Cosmopolitan December 1917
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Straight and Narrow Path Leading to the Refreshment Counter, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Things We Can’t Get Along Without Unless—, (ss)  Cosmopolitan November 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Twelve-Cylinder Speed of the Leisure Class, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1916
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Two Sensational Failures, (ss)  Cosmopolitan April 1915
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Uplift That Moved Sideways, (ss)  Cosmopolitan March 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Wailing in the Desert, (ss)  Cosmopolitan August 1920
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Waist-Band That Was Taut Up to the Moment It Gave Way, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1917
    
    * ___ The Fable of the Week-Enders and the Dreadful Doings, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of Those Who Stood the Gaff and Smiled or Otherwise, (ss)  Cosmopolitan August 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of What Showed Up in the Red Glare, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1918
    
    * ___ The Fable of What the Best People Are Not Doing, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1915
    
    * ___ The Fable of What They Hankered for and What Was Delivered to Them, (ss)  Cosmopolitan November 1917
    
    * ___ The Modern Fable of the Spotlighters and the Spotter, (ss)  Cosmopolitan February 1917
    
    * ___ A Mosquito Fleet of Undersized Chasers and Destroyers, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1917
    
    * ___ The New Fable of Susan and the Daughter and the Granddaughter, and Then Something Really Grand, (ss)  Cosmopolitan September 1913
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Aerial Performer, the Buzzing Blondine, and the Daughter of Mr. Jackson, (ss)  Cosmopolitan August 1913
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Father Who Jumped In, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine January 1913
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Intermittent Fusser, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine October 1912
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Lonesome Camp on the Frozen Heights, (ss)  Cosmopolitan December 1913
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Marathon in the Mud and the Laurel Wreath, (ss)  Cosmopolitan January 1914
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Private Agitator and What He Cooked Up, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine August 1912
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Scoffer Who Fell Hard and the Woman Sitting By, (ss)  Cosmopolitan October 1913
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Search for Climate, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine November 1912
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Speedy Sprite, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine September 1912
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Toilsome Ascent and the Shining Table Land, (ss)  Cosmopolitan June 1913
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Uplifter and His Dandy Little Opus, (ss)  Cosmopolitan Magazine February 1913
    
    * ___ The New Fable of the Wandering Boy and the Wayward Parents, (ss)  Cosmopolitan March 1913
    
    * ___ The New Fable of What Transpires After the Wind-up, (ss)  Cosmopolitan April 1913
    - * Non-Celebrities, (cl)  Cosmopolitan April 1924
 
    - * Old People, (ed)  Cosmopolitan January 1924
 
    - * The Old-Time Rally, (ar)  The Saturday Evening Post October 31 1908
 
    - * On His Uppers, (ss)  Cosmopolitan July 1928
 
    - * Oratory, (ed)  Cosmopolitan May 1921
 
    - * The Persecuted Wife: 1885 vs. 1925, (th)  Liberty July 4 1925
 
    
    - * Politics—Once a Massacure, Now a Musicale, (cl)  Cosmopolitan November 1924
 
    - * Prairie Kings of Yesterday, (ar)  The Saturday Evening Post July 4 1931
 
    - * Pride, (ed)  Cosmopolitan August 1923
 
    - * Put Up a Front, (ed)  Cosmopolitan May 1922
 
    - * The Real Freshman, (ar)  The Saturday Evening Post October 25 1902
 
    - * Refrainers, (ed)  Cosmopolitan June 1923
 
    - * Relieves His Mind on a Human Pest, (ed)  Cosmopolitan July 1922
 
    - * Remember Me as the Man Who Might Have Bunked with John L., (cl)  Cosmopolitan September 1925 [Ref. John S. Sullivan]
 
    - * Riley and His Friends, (ar)  The Saturday Evening Post September 27 1930
 
    - * Round About Cairo with or Without the Assistance of the Dragoman or Simon Legree of the Orient, (ss)  The Idler February 1907
 
    
    - * Shiner’s Diplomacy, (ss)  10 Story Book August 1903
 
    
    - * The Slim Princess, (sl)  The Saturday Evening Post Nov 24,   Dec 1 1906
 
    - * The Social Error of Being Well Fed, (ed)  Cosmopolitan September 1922
 
    - * Society, (ed)  Cosmopolitan February 1923
 
    - * Soft Hats, Hard Hats and Coronets, (cl)  Cosmopolitan July 1925
 
    - * Some High Spots, (cl)  Cosmopolitan August 1925
 
    - * Specialists, (cl)  Cosmopolitan February 1924
 
    - * The Stories That Riley Used to Tell, (hu)  Cosmopolitan December 1927
 
    - * The Sultan of Sulu, (ss) 
 
    
    - * Tales of a Country Town: The Identification of “Bronco Jim”, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post January 24 1903
 
    - * Talks About Tom, (ar)  Photoplay March 1924
 
    - * “Tall-stoy”, (ss) 
 
    
    - * That Proudest Moment—When a Banker Shakes Hands with You, (ed)  Cosmopolitan December 1922
 
    - * Then and Now, (cl)  Cosmopolitan March 1927
 
    - * “They Call It Dancing”, (ed)  Cosmopolitan March 1922
 
    - * They Simply Wouldn’t Let Me Be a High-Brow, (ar)  The American Magazine December 1920
 
    - * Those Who Sit on the Edge of a Cloud, (ed)  Cosmopolitan September 1921
 
    - * To Get Along, Keep on Being a Country Boy, (ar)  Cosmopolitan December 1925
 
    - * “To Make a Hoosier Holiday”, (ss)  Collier’s Weekly December 17 1904
 
    
    - * Too Much Sunshine, (hu)  Liberty September 13 1924
 
    - * Treatise on Pie, (hu)  Esquire Autumn 1933
 
    - * The Trouble with the Hindu Is His Name’s Not McCarthy, (ed)  Cosmopolitan August 1922
 
    - * untitled (“Last night at twelve I felt immense/But now I feel like thirty cents”), (pm) 
 
    
    - * Vacations, (ar)  Nash’s and Pall Mall Magazine August 1921
 
    - * The Village Liar, (hu)  Liberty November 8 1924
 
    - * Weather, (cl)  Cosmopolitan March 1924
 
    - * What They Had Laid Out for Their Vacation, (vi)  Duluth Evening Herald May 24 1902, as "The Modern Fable of What They Had Laid Out for Their Vacation"
 
    
    - * What We Can Learn from Kenesaw and Will, (ar)  The American Magazine November 1922
 
    - * When Good Fellows Get Together, (cl)  Cosmopolitan February 1927
 
    - * When I Owed My Wild Oats, (es)  Cosmopolitan October 1926
 
    - * Where Angels Fear to Tread, (ar)  Cosmopolitan April 1927
 
    - * The White Ewe, (pl)  Esquire January 1934
 
    - * With Mr. Peasley in Darkest London, (ss)  The Idler December 1906
 
    - * A Word of Advice About Advice, (hu)  Cosmopolitan August 1921
 
    
    - * The Yankee’s Prayer, (cl)  Cosmopolitan October 1924
 
    - * Yes, But—, (ar)  Cosmopolitan December 1923
 
    
     
_____, [ref.]
  
[]Adeane, Louis (fl. 1940s) (chron.)
  
    - * The Hero Myth in Kafka’s Writing, (ar)  Focus One ed. B. Rajan & Andrew Pearse, Dobson, 1945
 
    - * On a Wedding Anniversary, (pm)  The Windmill v2 #6, 1947
 
    - * Reality, (pm)  Focus One ed. B. Rajan & Andrew Pearse, Dobson, 1945
 
    - * St. James’ Park, (pm)  Focus One ed. B. Rajan & Andrew Pearse, Dobson, 1945
 
  
[]Adee, David Graham (1837-1901) (chron.)
  
    - * Jim Wagman of Wagman’s Load, (ss)  Lippincott’s Magazine of Literature, Science and Education July 1871
 
    - * No. 19, State Street, (sl)  Cassell’s Saturday Journal Oct 20,   Nov 17,   Dec 1,   Dec 8,   Dec 15 1888
 
    - * On Foot in Navarre, (ar)  Lippincott’s Magazine of Literature, Science and Education May 1872
 
    - * The Story of a Song, (ar)  Harper’s New Monthly Magazine September 1895
 
    - * Types of Castilian Vagrancy, (ar)  Lippincott’s Magazine of Literature, Science and Education January 1872
 
  
[]Adee, Lucy A. K. (fl. 1940s) (chron.)
  
    - * Apple Blossoms, (pm)  The Layman’s Magazine #16, May 1941
 
    - * Church Windows, (pm)  The Layman’s Magazine #17, June 1941
 
    - * The Cobbler, (pm)  The Layman’s Magazine #4, May 1940
 
    - * A Lost Balloon, (pm)  The Layman’s Magazine #5, June 1940
 
    - * May Apples, (pm)  The Layman’s Magazine #16, May 1941
 
    - * Pool on the Rocks, (pm)  The Layman’s Magazine #7, August 1940
 
    - * Wind Ripples, (pm)  The Layman’s Magazine #2, March 1940
 
  
[]Adeler, Max; pseudonym of Charles H. Clark (1841-1915) (about) (chron.)
  
    - * An Amateur Farmer, (vi)  Chicago Ledger July 4 1908
 
    - * Brown Didn’t Want It, (vi)  Chicago Ledger August 1 1908
 
    - * Captain Bluitt Attempts to Peer Into the Future, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post November 2 1901
 
    - * Cooley’s Boy and Dog, (ex) from Out of the Hurly-Burly,  George Maclean, 1874
 
    
    - * Didn’t Understand the Language, (vi)  Chicago Ledger July 27 1907
 
    - * An Experimental Dog, (vi)  Chicago Ledger December 28 1907
 
    - * The Flying Dutchman, (ss)  The Windsor Magazine December 1903
 
    
    - * The Foreign Invasion, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post October 5 1901
 
    - * Frictional Electricity, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post February 22 1902
 
    
    - * The General Culture Club, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post October 12 1901
 
    - * The Great Natural Healer, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post January 25 1902
 
    - * How He Reformed, (vi)  Chicago Ledger April 4 1908
 
    - * The Late Mrs. Pollock, (vi)  The People’s Home Journal August 1903
 
    - * Major Todd’s Legg, (vi)  Chicago Ledger May 15 1909
 
    - * The March of Invention, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post September 21 1901
 
    - * Mary Jones, (ss)  The Windsor Magazine August 1903
 
    - * Mrs. Dickson’s Bump, (vi)  Chicago Ledger May 30 1908
 
    - * A New View of Bunker Hill, (vi)  Chicago Ledger August 24 1907
 
    - * Not Simply for Love, (vi) , uncredited.
 
    
    - * The Old-Time Sunday-School Book, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post September 28 1901
 
    - * A Phenomenal Rooster, (vi)  Chicago Ledger July 27 1907
 
    - * The Political Machine in Turley, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post October 19 1901
 
    - * Professor Baffin’s Adventures, (na)  Beeton’s Christmas Annual #21, 1880
 
    - * The Reform Campaign in Merriweather County, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post November 7 1903
 
    
    - * Rufus Potter’s Oration, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post October 26 1901
 
    - * The Showman’s Trouble, (vi)  Our Continent #1, February 15 1882
 
    - * Spooner Was Discouraged, (vi)  Chicago Ledger February 1 1908
 
    - * Stump’s Political Career, (vi)  Chicago Ledger September 14 1907
 
    - * Summertime in the Country, (hu)  Nick Carter Stories #147, July 3 1915
 
    - * Tales of Old Turley:
    
    * ___ Captain Bluitt Attempts to Peer Into the Future, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post November 2 1901
    
    * ___ The Foreign Invasion, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post October 5 1901
    
    * ___ The General Culture Club, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post October 12 1901
    
    * ___ The March of Invention, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post September 21 1901
    
    * ___ The Old-Time Sunday-School Book, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post September 28 1901
    
    * ___ The Political Machine in Turley, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post October 19 1901
    
    * ___ Rufus Potter’s Oration, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post October 26 1901
    - * A Valuable Invention, (ss)  Young Ireland: An Irish Magazine of Entertainment and Instruction November 11 1876
 
    - * What Young Mr. Duncan Wanted, (vi)  Chicago Ledger May 25 1907
 
    - * The Wish and the Deed, (ss)  The Saturday Evening Post March 7 1903
 
   
_____, ed.
  
_____, [ref.]
  
[]Adelman, Skippy (1924-2004); used pseudonyms Logan C. Claybourne, David Crewe, Lance Kermit & Ray P. Shotwell (about) (chron.)
  
    - * Beat Around the Bushes, (ar)  Sports Novels Magazine August 1951
 
    - * Behind the Iron Mask, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories December 1951
 
    - * The Big Bat, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories August 1948
 
    - * Bloody Count Ivan, (ts)  Detective Tales January 1950
 
    
    - * Bloody “Robin Hood”, (ar)  Detective Tales February 1950
 
    
    - * Boom Town Ring Busts, (ar)  New Sports Magazine December 1948
 
    - * Boothill Backtrail, (ms)  Fifteen Western Tales April 1949
 
    - * Bric-a-Brac Kid, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories July 1948
 
    - * Casey Now Pitching, (ar)  Sports Novels Magazine July 1948
 
    - * Chesty, (ar)  Sports Novels Magazine April 1948
 
    - * Clamor Guy, (ar)  New Sports Magazine December 1950
 
    - * The Crimson Pool, (ms)  Dime Mystery Magazine October 1949
 
    - * A Dash of Pepper, (vi)  Dime Detective Magazine August 1951
 
    
    - * Dead Man’s Strike, (ar)  Fifteen Western Tales July 1949
 
    - * Dead Wrong, (ms)  Fifteen Western Tales February 1951
 
    - * Fego Baca’s Java Jinx, (ar)  Star Western May 1949
 
    - * A Fool and His $250,000, (ts)  Detective Tales July 1950
 
    - * A Friend of the Grim Reaper, (ms)  Dime Mystery Magazine August 1949
 
    - * Giant Killer, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories April 1951
 
    - * The Great Hahn, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories March 1948
 
    - * Gun Lap King, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories September 1948
 
    - * Homicidal Hook-Up, (ts)  Detective Tales July 1949
 
    - * Iron Arm, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories October 1948
 
    - * Jeffries, the Mighty, (ar)  New Sports Magazine February 1949
 
    - * Last Drop, (ar)  Fifteen Western Tales March 1949
 
    - * Love Killer, (ts)  15 Story Detective February 1951
 
    
    - * Mama’s Model Killer, (ar)  Dime Detective Magazine August 1952
 
    - * Never-Lose Team, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories May 1950
 
    - * One Man’s Meat—, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories May 1948
 
    - * Operation .45, (ar)  Fifteen Western Tales June 1949
 
    - * Peter the Confessor, (ar)  Detective Fiction May 1951
 
    - * Pity the Poor Penman!, (ar)  Detective Tales December 1952
 
    - * Right—to the Heart, (ar)  New Sports Magazine April 1949
 
    - * Rocks in His Fists, (ar)  Sports Novels Magazine June 1951
 
    - * Saved by the Noose, (ts)  Detective Fiction July 1951
 
    
    - * School for Aces, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories January 1949
 
    - * She Loved Him to Death!, (ts)  Detective Tales November 1949
 
    - * Star Maker, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories January 1951
 
    - * Sure Thing, (ar)  Detective Tales December 1949
 
    - * Winner Take Nothing, (ar)  Fifteen Sports Stories April 1952
 
    - * With Books and Bullets, (ar)  Fifteen Western Tales December 1948
 
  
[]Aderente, Vincent (1880-1941) (about) (chron.)
  
    - * [illustration(s)], (il)  Cosmopolitan Oct,   Nov 1913,   Jun 1915
 
    - * [illustration(s)], (il)  Nash’s and Pall Mall Magazine Dec 1914,   May,   Nov 1915,   Jan 1916,   Mar,   Nov 1917,   Mar 1919
 
  
[]Adès, David (fl. 2000s-2010s) (chron.)
  
    - * Chameleon, (pm)  Tirra Lirra Spring/Summer 2003
 
    - * The First Pill, (vi)  AntipodeanSF #206, September 2015
 
    - * Irena Galinskayas’s Log  [Scavenger of the Deft Hand], (vi)  AntipodeanSF #210, January 2016
 
    - * The Last Woman but One, (vi)  AntipodeanSF #203, June 2015
 
    - * Scavenger Marks Time, (vi)  AntipodeanSF #209, December 2015
 
    - * Scavenger of the Dead Hand, (vi)  AntipodeanSF #207, October 2015
 
    - * Scavenger of the Deft Hand  [Scavenger of the Deft Hand], (vi)  AntipodeanSF #196, October 2014
 
    - * Scavenger’s Hunch, (vi)  AntipodeanSF #202, May 2015
 
    - * There Is No Such Thing As Coincidence, (vi)  AntipodeanSF #208, November 2015
 
  
[]Adey, Kelly (fl. 2000s) (chron.)
  
    - * Cowboy Bebop—Anime Series Reviewed, (mr)  Aoife’s Kiss #5, June 2003
 
    - * Dog Soldiers, A Review, (br)  Aoife’s Kiss September 2004
 
    - * Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers—Movie Review, (mr)  Aoife’s Kiss #4, March 2003
 
    - * Movie Review: League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, (mr)  Aoife’s Kiss December 2003
 
    - * Peter Pan: Reviewed, (mr)  Aoife’s Kiss March 2004
 
    - * Queen of the Damned, (mr)  Aoife’s Kiss #2, September 2002
 
    - * Reign of Fire, (mr)  Aoife’s Kiss #3, December 2002
 
  
[]Adey, Robert (Clive Smith) (1941-2015) (about) (books) (chron.)
  
    - * The Impossible Mr. Queen, (ar)  The Tragedy of Errors and Others by Ellery Queen, Crippen & Landru, 1999 [Ref. Frederic Dannay & Manfred B. Lee]
 
    - * In Search of the “Con Man”, (ar)  The Armchair Detective July 1969
 
    - * Introduction, (in)  As It Might Have Been ed. Robert C. S. Adey, Calabash Press, 1998
 
    - * Introduction (with Christopher Lowder), (in)  The Art of the Impossible ed. Jack Adrian & Robert Adey, Xanadu, 1990, as by Robert Adey & Jack Adrian
 
    - * Introduction (with Christopher Lowder), (in)  Murder Impossible ed. Jack Adrian & Robert Adey, Carroll & Graf, 1990, as by Robert Adey & Jack Adrian
 
    - * West End Notes, (ms)  The Armchair Detective January 1971
 
    - * The Writing Career of Joseph Commings, (in)  Banner Deadlines by Joseph Commings, Crippen & Landru, 2004 [Ref. Joseph Commings]
 
    - * [letter], (lt)  The Ghosts & Scholars M.R. James Newsletter #12, September 2007
 
  
_____, ed.
  
    - * The Art of the Impossible (with Christopher Lowder), (an) Xanadu (hc), 1990 , as by Robert Adey & Jack Adrian
 
    - * As It Might Have Been, (an) Calabash Press (hc), 1998 
 
    - * Banner Deadlines by Joseph Commings, (co) Crippen & Landru (tp), May 2004 
 
    - * Death Locked In (with Douglas G. Greene), (an) International Polygonics (tp), October 1987 
 
    - * Murder Impossible (with Christopher Lowder), (an) Xanadu, 1990, as The Art of the Impossible, by Robert Adey & Jack Adrian
 
    
    - * Murder Most Scottish (with Stefan Dziemianowicz, Ed Gorman & Martin H. Greenberg), (an) Barnes & Noble (hc), August 1999 
 
  
_____, trans.
  
[]Adichie, Chimamanda Ngozi (1977- ) (about) (books) (chron.)
  
    - * The American Embassy, (ss)  Prism International Spring 2002
 
    
    - * Apollo, (ss)  The New Yorker April 13 2015
 
    
    - * Birdsong, (ss)  The New Yorker September 20 2010
 
    
    - * Ceiling, (ss)  Granta #111, Summer 2010
 
    
    - * Cell One, (ss)  The New Yorker January 29 2007
 
    - * Checking Out, (ss)  The New Yorker March 18 2013
 
    - * Chuka, (ss)  The New Yorker February 17/February 24 2025
 
    - * “Garcia Marquez Taught Me the Exquisite Power of Stories”, (ar)  The Guardian September 15 2023
 
    - * Ghosts, (ss)  Zoetrope: All-Story Winter 2004
 
    - * Half of a Yellow Sun, (ss)  Zoetrope: All-Story Summer 2003
 
    - * The Headstrong Historian, (ss)  The New Yorker June 23 2008
 
    
    - * Introduction, (in)  The Best Short Stories 2021 ed. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Anchor Books, 2021
 
    - * The Master, (ex)  Granta #92, Winter 2005
 
    - * A Private Experience, (ss)  The Observer December 28 2008
 
    - * A Tampered Destiny, (ss)  Financial Times December 29 2007
 
    - * The Thing around Your Neck, (ss)  This Is Not Chick Lit ed. Elizabeth Merrick, Random House, 2006
 
    - * “Touch” by Alexi Zentner, (ar)  The O. Henry Prize Stories 2008 ed. Laura Furman, Anchor Books, 2008 [Ref. Alexi Zentner]
 
    - * Transition to Glory, (ss)  One Story #27, September 30 2003
 
    - * “Until I got to the US, I never thought of myself as Black”, (ar)  The Daily Telegraph May 27 2023
 
    - * Zikora, (nv)  Amazon Original Stories, October 27 2020
 
    
  
_____, ed.
  
_____, [ref.]
  
[]Adimari, Ralph (T.) (1902-1970) (about) (chron.)
  
    - * The Alger Fakes, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up October 1961
 
    - * Cecil Burleigh, One of the Comic Writers, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up #296, May 1957
 
    - * A Checklist of Street and Smitth Dime Novel and Related Publications (with Edward T. LeBlanc), (bi)  Dime Novel Round-Up #299, August 1957
 
    - * Clara Augusta Jones (1839-1905), (ob)  Dime Novel Round-Up #297, June 1957 [Ref. Clara Augusta Jones]
 
    - * The Dime Novel—Its Place in American Literature, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up Jan,   Feb,   Mar,   Apr,   May,   Jul/Aug 1932,   #21 Jul/Aug,   #23 Oct,   #25 Dec 1933
 
    - * Ellen Price Wood (1814-1887), English Juvenile Writer, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up March 1963 [Ref. Mrs. Henry Wood]
 
    - * Facts About Peter Pad, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up December 1931
 
    - * Frank Merriwell on Radio and Television (with Gerald J. McIntosh), (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up November 1966
 
    - * The Frank Tousey Authors, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up #293, February 1957
 
    - * James Perkins Tracy—“A Self-Made Man”, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up #277, October 1955
 
    - * The J. Edward Leithead Pseudonyms, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up February 1960
 
    - * Miscellaneous Pseudonyms, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up February 1961
 
    - * A Partial History of the Brett Publications, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up May 1963
 
    - * Report on Robert Emmett Owen—Illustrator of Street & Smith Publications, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up June 1960
 
    - * Upton Sinclair, Last of the Dime Novelists, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up #285, June 1956 [Ref. Upton Sinclair]
 
    - * William J. Benners, The First Historian of the Dime Novel, (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up #312, September 1958
 
    - * Wolff—and the Tousey Reprints (with C. Arthur Neetz), (ar)  Dime Novel Round-Up May 1960
 
  
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