Reprinted Lone Pine Publishing (Canada) 1994. |
Also as 25 Modern Stories of Mystery and Imagination. |
Reprint (Wilfred Funk 1941 as The Other Worlds) anthology. |
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Reprint (Allison & Busby 1970) powerful, poignant, and funny memoir of the 1930s, seen through the eyes of Horace Spurgeon Fenton, apprentice toolmaker. Volume one in the series. |
Reprint (Secker & Warburg 1968) darkly comic novel documenting Fenton’s collisions with the manic world of the Wardour Street film industry. Volume two in the series. |
A companion book to Jack Trevor Story’s Letters to an Intimate Stranger, comprising a selection of Jack’s newspaper columns including the very funny “Maggie” ones from The Guardian. |
Reprint (Secker & Warburg 1963) classic novel about the world of hire purchase debt. Volume one in the series. |
Reprint (W.H. Allen 1962) humorous novel about a professional comic strip writer who gets caught up in a case of mistaken identity via a murder hunt. |
Reprint (Alvin Redman 1958) whacky English farce about a writer who is rich and celebrated in Spain, but poor and ignored in England. |
Reprint (Allison & Busby 1970) fast-paced comedy thriller set amidst the dying echoes of the 1960s. Volume three in the series. |
Reprint (Duckworth 1979 as Up River) satirical SF novel Given as Screwrape Lettuce on the cover and spine. |
Reprint (Secker & Warburg 1963) classic novel about the world of hire purchase debt. Volume two in the series. |
Reprint (Boardman 1949) classic novel that was adapted by Alfred Hitchcock for his film of the same name in 1955. |
Reprint (Secker & Warburg 1963) classic novel about the world of hire purchase debt. Volume three in the series. |
Reprint (Allison & Busby 1971) socio-mystery comedy involving spies and travel agents. |
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First book publication of an early novel which originally appeared in All-Story Magazine in 1914—adventures with a lost race of Incas. |
Reprint (Penzler 1985) Lost Race novel. Details taken from publisher website. |
A Mystery Writers of America Anthology. Has endnotes by each story’s author. Also avaliable in the U.K. (Macdonald 1958 abridged as For Tomorrow We Die). |