Reprint (Burns, Oates & Washbourne 1923) collection of stories about Father Pater, an Anglican monk who hears voices that solve ghostly and contemporary mysteries. This edition adds an introduction by David G. Rowlands and an extract from Pater’s My Cousin Philip. This is a limited edition of 500 copies. A world-wide edition available in the US for $40.00 and in the UK for £25.00. |
Collection of stories about Father Pater, an Anglican monk who hears voices that solve ghostly and contemporary mysteries. |
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Collection with some crime. |
Young-adult collection of six stories, several with fantasy or SF elements. |
In the “Lost Classics” series. |
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Anthology of 26 anthropomorphic stories. Authors include Lawrence Watt-Evans, Jefferson P. Swycaffer, and Mel. White. Afterword and bibliography by Fred Patten. Forewords by Tim Susman, Gene Breshears, and Phil Geusz. |
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Anthology of 11 anthropomorphic/furry stories about humanoid animals, a mix of winners and finalists from the last ten years of the Ursa Major Award for Best Anthropomorphic Short Fiction. Patten’s introduction discusses the rise of furry fandom and the awards. Authors include Kyell Gold, Paul Di Filippo, and Naomi Kritzer. |
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Details supplied by Todd Mason. |
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Volume 2 of a three volume series. |
Volume 3 of a three volume series. |
A hardcover edition (-63874-7) was announced but not seen. |
Original anthology of 30 stories by members of the International Thriller Writers, Inc. |
Anthology of suspense and fantasy stories of the air. |
Anthology of supernatural stories about cars. Reprinted (Star 1987) as Duel and Other Horror Stories of the Road. |
Anthology of thirteen railway related ghost and mystery stories. Also available in pb (London: Star 1985). |
Anthology of 14 sea fantasies. American edition: Salem House 1985. |
Fourteen original stories set in Kansas City. |
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Subtitled “Dark and Weird Stories” on the cover and “Weird Tales of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and the Supernatural” on the title page. Each story is followed (on separate page) by an “Afterword” explaining its background. Details supplied by Denny Lien. |