The FictionMags Index
Index by Name: Page 1749
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[]Keaton, David James (fl. 2000s-2020s) (about) (books) (chron.)
- * Bad Hand Acting, (ss) Grift Magazine #2, Spring 2013
- * Body Cam Crosses, (ss) Noir Nation #7, April 2019
- * Bonus Slice: Pizza Party Friday! (with Max Booth, III), (ss) Tales from the Crust ed. Max Booth, III & David James Keaton, Perpetual Motion Machine Publishing, 2019
- * Clam Digger, (ss) Crime Factory Horror Factory 2012
- * The Dish Farm, (ss) Out of the Gutter #8, December 2012
- * A Dull Boy, (ss) Exigencies ed. Richard Thomas, Dark House Press, 2015
- * Either Way It Ends with a Shovel, (nv) Crime Factory v2 #8, 2011
- * The Flowery, (ss) Red Room #1, October 2017
- * The Ghost of Tom Joad, (ss) Trouble in the Heartland ed. Joe Clifford, Gutter Books, 2014
- * Introduction from Tales from the Crust (with Steve Gillies), (ss) Dark Moon Digest #36, July 2019
- * I Only Saw You, (vi) Forbidden Futures #6, Fall 2019
- * Mosquito Bites, (ss) Pulp Modern Autumn 2011
- * One Piece at a Time, (ss) Just to Watch Them Die ed. Joe Clifford, Gutter Books, 2017
- * Opening Sequence of Inevitable Chris Dorner Summer Blockbuster, (ss) Dark Corners Winter 2014
- * Over the Wall, (ss) Dark Yonder #7, Fall 2024
- * Pizza My Skull (with Steve Gillies), (pm) Tales from the Crust ed. Max Booth, III & David James Keaton, Perpetual Motion Machine Publishing, 2019
- * Queen Excluder, (ss) Gamut Magazine #6, June 2017
- * Schrödinger’s Rat, (ss) Needle Fall 2011
- * Shades, (ss) Pulp Modern Winter 2013
- * Shark with Thumbs, (ss) Big Pulp Fall 2009
- * She Was Found in a Guitar Case, (ex) Perpetual Motion Machine Publishing, July 2021
- * Slam Dunk at the Mesoamerican Ballgame (or No Escape from Planet Alcatraz), (in) Hard Sentences ed. David James Keaton & Joe Clifford, Broken River Books, 2017
- * Smelt (or A Gun Named Sioux), (nv) The Big Adios Western Digest Fall 2014
- * The Smile Police, (ss) Mystery Tribune #2, Summer 2017
- * Three Ways Without Water, (ss) Pulp Modern Winter 2011/2012
- * The Unforeseen Hazards of Hitchhiking, (ss) Unloaded Vol 2 ed. Eric Beetner, Down & Out Books, 2018
- * What’s Worst, (ss) Stealing Propeller Hats from the Dead by David James Keaton, Perpetual Motion Machine Publishing, 2015
_____, ed.
_____, [ref.]
[]Keaton, M. (fl. 2000s-2010s) (about) (chron.)
- * Calamity’s Child, (sl) Ray Gun Revival #8 Oct 15 2006, #41 Mar 1, #43 May, #44 Jun, #45 Jul, #46 Sep, #47 Oct, #48 Nov, #49 Dec 2008, #51,
#52, #53, #54, #55, #50 Jan 2009
#56, #57 2010
- * Calx in Rime, (ss) Abyss & Apex #68, 4th Quarter 2018
- * The Dead Thing, (ss) Shroud #6, Spring 2009
- * Fleet, (nv) Outposts of Beyond #2, October 2013
- * Pinny, (ss) Abyss & Apex #22, 2nd Quarter 2007
- * Who Shot Okk?, (nv) Cosmic Crime Stories January 2011
[]Keaton, William J. (fl. 1990s); used pseudonym WJaKe (chron.)
- * Book Review, (br) Galactic Citizen #5, Spring 1994
- * Final Orbit, (ed) Galactic Citizen #6, Summer 1994
- * Final Orbit, (ed) Galactic Citizen #7 Fll 1994, #8 Spr, #9 Sum, #10 Fll, #11 Win 1995, #12 Spr, #13 Sum 1996, #14 Spr, #15 Sum, #16 Win 1997, as by WJaKe
- * From the (ulp!) Editor…, (ed) Galactic Citizen #5, Spring 1994
- * The Gathering… Too Strange to Be Fiction (with Charles F. Coffin, Becky Reynard, John Tilden & Diane Warfield), (ar) Galactic Citizen #4, Autumn 1993
- * Online Update, (cl) Galactic Citizen #6, Summer 1994
- * RAH Memorial Rope ’n Ride ’94, (ar) Galactic Citizen #7, Fall 1994
- * A Visit to Butler, MO (with Paul Van Bloem), (ar) Galactic Citizen #4, Autumn 1993
- * Whose Destiny in Space?, (mr) Galactic Citizen #8, Spring 1995
- * WorldCon ’96: Report from L.A., (ar) Galactic Citizen #13, Summer 1996, as by WJaKe
_____, ed.
- * Editor:
* ___ Galactic Citizen, #5 -.
- * Editor: Galactic Citizen #5 Spr, #6 Sum, #7 Fll 1994, #8 Spr, #9 Sum, #10 Fll, #11 Win 1995, #12 Spr, #13 Sum 1996, #14 Spr,
#15 Sum, #16 Win 1997
[]Keats, John (1795-1821) (about) (books) (chron.)
- * Addressed to Haydon, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Addressed to the Same, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Beauty Triumphant, (pm)
- * La Belle Dame Sans Merci, (pm) The Poetical Works of John Keats by John Keats, Edward Moxon, 1848
- Harper’s New Monthly Magazine December 1859; written in 1819. A somewhat different version was published in The Indicator, May 10, 1820.
- People’s Magazine July 1906
- Weird Tales August 1925
- The Golden Book Magazine #32, August 1927
- The Pocket Mystery Reader ed. Lee Wright, Pocket, 1942
- Dark of the Moon ed. August Derleth, Arkham House, 1947
- Look and Learn #10, March 24 1962
- Mystery! ed. Seon Manley & Gogo Lewis, Funk & Wagnalls, 1963
- To You with Love ed. Seon Manley & Gogo Lewis, Macrae Smith Company, 1969
- Something Strange ed. Marjorie B. Smiley, Mary Delores Jarmon & Domenica Paterno, Macmillan, 1969
- The Other Sides of Reality ed. Walter M. Cummins, Martin Green & Margaret Verhulst, Boyd & Fraser, 1972
- Wolf’s Complete Book of Terror ed. Leonard Wolf, Clarkson Potter, 1979
- Mists and Magic ed. Dorothy Edwards, Lutterworth Press, 1983
- The Dedalus Book of Femmes Fatales ed. Brian M. Stableford, Dedalus, 1992
- The Vampire Archives ed. Otto Penzler, Black Lizard, 2009
- Whistling Shade: Literary Journal Fall/Winter 2012
- Fireside Ghost Stories for Valentine’s Day ed. M. Grant Kellermeyer, Oldstyle Tales Press, 2018
- Classic, Spooky Poems for Halloween Night ed. M. Grant Kellermeyer, Oldstyle Tales Press, 2020
- * “Bright star…”, (pm)
- * Calidore, a Fragment, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Endymion, (pm) self-published, 1818
- * Endymion, (ex) self-published, 1818
- * The Eve of St. Agnes, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * Fancy, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * A Few Words from John Keats, (ms)
- * Four Seasons, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * The Human Seasons, (pm) The Literary Pocket-Book, 1819 ed. Leigh Hunt, 1818
- * “Hush, hush! tread softly!…”, (pm)
- * Hyperion, a Fragment, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * I Had a Dove, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * Imitation of Spenser, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * In a Drear-Nighted December, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * In City Pent (with John Milton), (pm)
- * In Drear December, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883, as "In a Drear-Nighted December"
- * Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * Isabella; or, The Pot of Basil, (ex) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * I Stood Tiptoe Upon a Little Hill, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Keats’ Last Sonnet, (pm)
- * Lamia, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, (co) Taylor and Hessey (hc), 1820
- * Last Sonnet, (pm) The Plymouth and Devonport Weekly Journal September 27 1838
- * Lines on the Mermaid Tavern, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * Meg Merrilies, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * The Mermaid Tavern, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820, as "Lines on the Mermaid Tavern"
- * Modern Love, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * My Dove, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883, as "I Had a Dove"
- * “My Sweet Girl…”, (lt)
- * Ode (“Bards of Passion and of Mirth”), (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * Ode on a Grecian Urn, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * Ode on Melancholy, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * Ode to a Nightingale, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * Ode to Psyche, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * On Chapman’s “Homer”, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817, as "On First Looking Into Chapman’s Homer"
- * On Fame, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * On First Looking Into Chapman’s Homer, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * On Leaving Some Friends at an Early Hour, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * On Receiving a Curious Shell, and a Copy of Verses, from the Same Ladies, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * On the Grasshopper and Cricket, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Oxford, (pm)
- * Poems, (co) C. & J. Ollier (hc), 1817
- * Precepts for Poetry, (ms)
- * Robin Hood, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * A Roundelay to Sorrow, (pm)
- * The Sea, (pm)
- * Sentences and Opinions, (ms)
- * September: “Season of mists…”, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820, as "To Autumn"
- * The Shell’s Song, (pm)
- * Sleep and Poetry, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * “Songs of Poets Dead and Gone”, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820, as "Lines on the Mermaid Tavern"
- * Sonnet (“Happy is England!”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Sonnet (“How many bards gild the lapses of time!”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Sonnet (“Keen, fitful gusts”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Sonnet (“O Solitude!”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Sonnet (“There was a season when the fabled name…”), (pm) Harper’s New Monthly Magazine August 1877
- * Sonnet (“To one who has been long in city pent…”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Specimen of an Induction to a Poem, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Stanzas, (pm) The Complete Poetical Works and Letters of John Keats by John Keats, Houghton Mifflin, 1899
- * “A Thing of beauty is a joy forever…”, (ex) self-published, 1818, as "Endymion"
- * This Living Hand, (pm) The Complete Poetical Works and Letters of John Keats by John Keats, Houghton Mifflin, 1899
- * To a Friend Who Sent Me Some Roses, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To Ailsa Rock, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * To Autumn, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems, Taylor and Hessey, 1820
- * To Charles Cowden Clarke, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To G.A.W., (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To George Felton Mathew, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To **** (“Had I a man’s fair form”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To **** (“Hadst thou lived in days of old”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To Hope, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To Kosciusko, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To Leigh Hunt, Esq., (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To My Brother George (“Full many a dreary hour”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To My Brother George (“Many the wonders I this day have seen”), (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To My Brothers, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * To One Who Has Been Long in City Pent, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817, as "Sonnet (“To one who has been long in city pent…”)"
- * To Sleep, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * To Some Ladies, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Traduzione dell’“Ode sopra un’urna greca” di Keats (Translation of “Ode upon a Grecian Urn” by Keats), (pm) Botteghe Oscure; translated by Augusto Frassineti
- * Two Sonnets, (gp)
- * untitled (“What though, for showing truth to flattered state…”), (pm)
- * Upon First Looking Into Chapman’s Homer, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817, as "On First Looking Into Chapman’s Homer"
- * “When I have fears…”, (pm) The Poetical Works and Other Writings of John Keats by John Keats, Reeves & Turner, 1883
- * Woman! When I Behold Thee Flippant, Vain, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
- * Written on the Day That Mr. Leigh Hunt Left Prison, (pm) Poems, C. & J. Ollier, 1817
_____, [ref.]
- * English Men and Women of Letters of the 19th Century. 4. John Keats by Richard Garnett, (ar) Atalanta January 1889
- * How an Upstart Poet Was Put in His Place, (br) Quarterly Review of Literature September 1818, uncredited.
- * John Keats by Alice King, (bg) The Argosy (UK) November 1878
- * John Keats and Fanny Brawne by Richard Le Gallienne, (ar) The Cosmopolitan October 1904
- * John Keats and Winchester by W. Courthope Forman, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine February 1921
- * Keats’s Fame by J. C. Squire, (br) Land & Water November 15 1917
- * The Poet as Hero: The Letters of John Keats by Lionel Trilling, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine Autumn 1951
- * The Poet Keats, (bg) Harper’s New Monthly Magazine August 1877, uncredited.
- * With Keats at Hampstead by Morley Adams, (ar) T.P.’s Magazine February 1912
[]Keats, John (fl. 1950s-1970s) (chron.)
- * Barber, (ar) Bluebook December 1955
- * The Best Part of Fishing, (ss) Boys’ Life June 1976
- * Boxcar to the West, (ss) The Saturday Evening Post August 10/August 17 1963
- * Busdriver, (ar) Bluebook April 1956
- * The Draft Is Good for You, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post February 10 1968
- * Heart of the World, (ar) Boys’ Life November 1975
- * A Matter of Faith, (ss) Boys’ Life April 1978
- * The Other Guy’s Job:
* ___ Barber, (cl) Bluebook December 1955
* ___ Busdriver, (cl) Bluebook April 1956
- * Speaking Out:
* ___ The Draft Is Good for You, (cl) The Saturday Evening Post February 10 1968
* ___ Stay Home and Don’t Vote, (cl) The Saturday Evening Post October 26 1963
- * Stay Home and Don’t Vote, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post October 26 1963
- * 1000 Isles of Fun, (ar) The American Magazine May 1956
- * You Can Get the Job You Want in 1956, (ar) Bluebook January 1956
- * You Could Always Hope, (ss) Playboy April 1964
_____, [ref.]
[]Keay, Jack (fl. 1930s-1960s) (chron.)
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Maclean’s Nov 1, Dec 1 1933, Feb 1, Feb 15, Mar 1, Mar 15, May 1, Jun 1, Jun 15, Jul 1,
Jul 15, Aug 1, Oct 1, Nov 1, Nov 15 1934
Jan 1, Feb 15, Sep 1, Oct 1, Oct 15, Dec 1 1935
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Argosy November 1949
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Argosy (UK) Oct 1963, Jul 1965
[]Kebbel, Thomas E(dward) (1827-1917) (chron.)
- * The Agricultural Labourer, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine Feb, Mar 1873, uncredited.
- * Biography, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine May 1883, uncredited.
- * The Brookside, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine March 1908
- * The Church and the Chase, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine August 1869, uncredited.
- * The Clergy of the Eighteenth Century, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine January 1883, uncredited.
- * Cobbett, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine April 1879, uncredited.
- * Country Gentlemen, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine May 1864, uncredited.
- * Country Life, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine December 1867, uncredited.
- * Critical Elections, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine November 1868, uncredited.
- * The Eighteenth Century, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine November 1878
- * Farmers, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine August 1863, uncredited.
- * First of September, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1876, uncredited.
- * Game, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1880, as by T. E. K.
- * Harvest, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1865, uncredited.
- * The Literary Restoration: 1790-1830, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1882, uncredited.
- * Mobs, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine June 1867, uncredited.
- * October; or, “The Days That Are No More”, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine October 1896, uncredited.
- * Oxford in the Long Vacation, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1879, as by T. E. K.
- * Partridge Shooting, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1864, uncredited.
- * A Pilgrimage to Selborne, (ar) Longman’s Magazine April 1884
- * Poaching, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1867, uncredited.
- * Pocket Boroughs, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1868, uncredited.
- * The Poetry of September, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine September 1877, uncredited.
- * Shop, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine April 1865, uncredited.
- * Shylock in London, (ts) The Cornhill Magazine January 1864, uncredited.
- * The Tenants’ Ball, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine February 1892, uncredited.
- * The Tenth Muse, (ar) The Country House October 1895
- * Unreformed Corporations, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine July 1880, uncredited.
- * Winter Shooting, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine February 1865, uncredited.
[]Keble, John (1792-1866) (about) (chron.)
- * The Effect of Example, (pm)
- * First Sunday in Lent, (pm) The Christian Year by John Keble, 1827
- * Home Joys, (pm) The Christian Year by John Keble, 1827, as "First Sunday in Lent"
- * How to Live, (ms)
- * Morning and Evening: Two Hymns, (sg)
- * Tell Thy Mother, (pm) Lyra Innocentium by John Wiley, Wiley and Putnam, 1846
_____, [ref.]
[]Kechula, Michael A. (fl. 2000s-2010s) (chron.)
- * The Area 51 Option, (ss) Mirror Dance #6, Summer 2009
- * Beasties, (vi) Scifantastic December 2005
- * Blue Berry Pie, (vi) New Myths #1, December 2007
- * The Chintzy Carpet, (ss) Mirror Dance #1, Spring 2008
- * Exploring the Dark Side of the Moon, (vi) The Drabbler #9, June 2007
- * A Few Abnormalities, (ss) Mirror Dance #2, Summer 2008
- * A Good Feed, (vi) Twisted Tongue #7, August 2007
- * Hemingway’s Hashery, (ss) Twisted Tongue #11, August 2008
- * Historical performance, (ss) Ethereal Tales #3, April 2009
- * I Shall Return, (ss) Liquid Imagination #2, Winter 2009
- * Let’s Trade, (vi) The Drabbler #11, June 2008
- * Mysterio and Galatea, (ss) Liquid Imagination #3, Spring 2009
- * One Million Jeboolas, (vi) Residential Aliens #6.5, mid December 2007
- * Payback, (ss) Ethereal Tales #1, October 2008
- * The Polka-Dot Suit, (ss) Wicked Karnival #3, 2005
- * Precious Cargo, (ss) Shadow Box ed. Shane Jiraiya Cummings & Angela Challis, Brimstone Press, 2005
- * A Preemptive Strike, (ss) Big Pulp Spring 2008
- * Red Dust, (ss) Morpheus Tales Ethereal Tales Special 2014
- * The Veil, (ss) Mirror Dance #3, Autumn 2008
- * Wilma’s Passion, (ss) Twisted Tongue #10, May 2008
[]Keddell, Emmie Avery (?-1907) (chron.)
- * At What Age Is Man Most Attractive to Women?, (sy) The Idler August 1897
- * The Colonial Secretary at Home, (ar) The Pall Mall Magazine October 1905 [Ref. Alfred Lyttelton]
- * The Dolls’ Hospital, (ar) The Lady’s Realm July 1905
- * The Earl and Countess of Crewe at Home, (ar) The Pall Mall Magazine October 1906 [Ref. Robert Ashburton Crewe-Milnes]
- * Early Marriages—Should They Be Encouraged or Abolished?, (sy) The Idler October 1897
- * Haddon Chambers, (bg) The Idler February 1904
- * “The Householder”, (ss) Crampton’s Magazine September 1902
- * Madame Blanche Marchesi at Home (with Blossom Keddell), (ar) Cassell’s Magazine March 1908 [Ref. Blanche Marchesi]
- * Mr. and Mrs. Asquith at Home, (ar) The Pall Mall Magazine July 1906 [Ref. Herbert H. Asquith]
- * Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gladstone at Home, (ar) The Pall Mall Magazine November 1906 [Ref. Herbert Gladstone]
- * Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harcourt at Home, (ar) The Pall Mall Magazine July 1907 [Ref. Lewis Harcourt]
- * The New British Ambassador to the U.S., (ar) The Busy Man’s Magazine February 1907
- * Orders for Santa Claus!, (sy) The Idler December 1897
- * The Prime Minister at Home, (ar) The Pall Mall Magazine March 1907 [Ref. Henry Campbell-Bannerman]
- * “Salut d’Amour”, (ss) The Idler January 1906
- * The Secretary of State for War, (ar) The Pall Mall Magazine May 1907 [Ref. Richard Haldane]
- * “Thou Shalt Not Make to Thyself Any Graven Image”, (ss) The Idler November 1897
[]Keddie, Henrietta (1827-1914); used pseudonym Sarah Tytler (about) (chron.)
- * Celebrated Lady Novelists, 1: Ann Radcliffe, and the “Mysteries of Udolpho”, (ar) Atalanta #29, February 1890 [Ref. Ann Radcliffe], as by Sarah Tytler
- * Diana, (sl) The Argosy (UK) Mar, Apr 1866, as by The Author of “The Nut Brown Maids”
- * English Men and Women of Letters of the 19th Century. 10. George Eliot, (ar) Atalanta July 1889 [Ref. George Eliot], as by Sarah Tytler
- * Famous French Women: Victims of the French Revolution I—Marie Antoinette, (ar) The Victorian Magazine #1, December 1891, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Famous French Women: Victims of the French Revolution II—Charlotte Corday, (ar) The Victorian Magazine #2, January 1892, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Famous French Women: Victims of the French Revolution II—Charlotte Corday, (ar) The Victorian Magazine #3, February 1892, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Famous French Women: Victims of the French Revolution III—Madame Boland, (ar) The Victorian Magazine #5, April 1892, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Famous French Women: IV—Madame de Sévigné, (ar) The Victorian Magazine #7, June 1892, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Famous French Women: Women of the Salon V—Julie d’Angennes de Rambouillet, (ar) The Victorian Magazine #8, July 1892, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Famous French Women: Women of the Salon VI—Madeleine de Scudery, (ar) The Victorian Magazine #9, August 1892, as by Sarah Tytler
- * French Janet:
* ___ Chapter I. Lady Windygates’s Instructions to Braehead, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine September 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter II. An Old French Hôtel and Its Occupants, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine September 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter III. Our Cousin Jeannette—The Widow Ste. Barbe, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine September 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter IV. The Young Laird Falls Sick, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine October 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter V. Braehead’s Flight with His Charge, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine October 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter VI. The Last Encounter, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine October 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter VII. The Welcome Home, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine November 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter VIII. A Haunted Man, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine November 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter IX. Braehead Enters the Breach and Makes a Clean Breast of It, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine November 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter X. A Haunted House, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine December 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XI. Another Witness, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine December 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XII. An Unequal Contest, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine December 1888, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XIII. Maisie at the Haughs, Where Auntie Peggie Reigned Queen, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine January 1889, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XIV. Maisie Receives Her Summons, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine January 1889, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XV. Maisie Breaks the Spell, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine January 1889, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XVI. Broad Daylight Again, with the Ball at Windygates,and First-Footing at the Haughs, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine February 1889, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XVII. The Arrival of the Picture, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine February 1889, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XVIII. In Doubt and Despair, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine February 1889, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XIX. Maisie Challenges Pearlin Jean, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine March 1889, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter XX. Victory, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine March 1889, uncredited.
* ___ The Epilogue, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine March 1889, uncredited.
- * Girls Who Won Success: 1. A Painter: Elizabeth Thompson (Lady Butler), (ar) Atalanta June 1888, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Girls Who Won Success: 2. A Doctor: Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, M.D., (ar) Atalanta July 1888, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Girls Who Won Success: 3. A Servant of the Sick and Poor: Florence Lees (Mrs. Dacre Craven), (ar) Atalanta August 1888, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Girls Who Won Success: 4. A Singer: Mary Davies, (ar) Atalanta September 1888, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Head-Work and Handiwork, (ar) Atalanta #98, November 1895, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Keeping Faith:
* ___ Chapter I. The First Meeting, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine October 1874, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter II. Another Meeting, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine October 1874, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter III. The Last Meeting, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine October 1874, uncredited.
- * Lorlotte and the Capitaine, (nv) The Cornhill Magazine July 1867, uncredited.
- * Occupation, (ar) Atalanta November 1889, as by Sarah Tytler
- * An Old John Bull:
* ___ Chapter I. A-Courting, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine September 1861, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter II. The Reformer, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine September 1861, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter III. A-Soldiering, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine September 1861, uncredited.
- * Picardy and Artois, (ar) Atalanta #36, September 1890, as by Sarah Tytler
- * The Realistic Novel, (ar) Atalanta #73, October 1893, as by Sarah Tytler
- * The Rev. Adam Cameron’s Visit to London:
* ___ Chapter I. What Sent the Minister to London, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine July 1876, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter II. Foes in Kinkell; Friends in London, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine July 1876, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter III. The Minister’s Visit to Westminster Abbey, and What Came of It, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine July 1876, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter IV. The Small House in Westminster, and What the Minister Heard There, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine July 1876, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter V. What Drew the Minister to the Playhouse, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine August 1876, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter VI. The Minister’s Confession to His People, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine August 1876, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter VII. The Reception of the Confession and Its Interruption, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine August 1876, uncredited.
- * The Stage Queen and the Squire:
* ___ Chapter I. The “Bear” at Bath, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine May 1861, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter II. Lady Betty on the Stage, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine May 1861, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter III. Mrs. Betty, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine May 1861, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter IV. Master Rowland Goes Up to London, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine June 1861, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter V. Mrs. Betty Travels Down Into Somersetshire, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine June 1861, uncredited.
* ___ Chapter VI. Between Mosely and Larks’ Hall, (sl) The Cornhill Magazine June 1861, uncredited.
- * Tid’s Old Red Rag of a Shawl, (ss) The Cornhill Magazine February 1865, uncredited.
- * Two Roads to One Goal, (ss) The Weekly Press #1945, June 18 1902, as by Sarah Tytler
- * Waterloo, (ar) Atalanta November 1887, as by Sarah Tytler
[]Kedzie, A. T. (fl. 1940s-1950s) (chron.)
- * Airpower Victory, (ms) Fantastic Adventures October 1949
- * All Atoms Vanish!, (ms) Fantastic Adventures December 1951
- * The Ambusher, (vi) Amazing Stories August 1950
- * Astronautic Advances, (ms) Fantastic Adventures May 1951
- * Atomic Submarine, (ms) Fantastic Adventures December 1950
- * Big Inventory, (ms) Fantastic Adventures December 1952
- * Blow-Hard Test, (ms) Amazing Stories December 1950
- * Brookhaven Miracle!, (ms) Fantastic Adventures February 1951
- * Chess in Three Dimensions, (ms) Fantastic Adventures November 1952
- * Co-Axial “Sniffer”, (ms) Fantastic Adventures April 1951
- * Color Coming Up!, (ms) Fantastic Adventures April 1950
- * Crystalline Power Plant, (ms) Fantastic Adventures August 1950
- * Earth’s First Insect, (ms) Amazing Stories January 1953
- * Errors Make Perfection!, (ms) Amazing Stories May 1952
- * Evil Surrounds Us…, (ms) Fantastic Adventures November 1950
- * Feed Them—or Fight Them!, (ms) Amazing Stories March 1952
- * Flying Eggbeater, (ms) Fantastic Adventures September 1950
- * Ganymedan Farmer, (ms) Amazing Stories May 1951
- * Glassblowing, (ms) Fantastic Adventures January 1950
- * Gravity’s the Villain, (ms) Fantastic Adventures August 1952
- * The Grim Note, (ms) Amazing Stories November 1950
- * Ground Sterilizing, (ms) Fantastic Adventures January 1951
- * Heinrich Hertz—and Radar, (ms) Fantastic Adventures April 1952
- * His Satanic Mercury, (ms) Fantastic Adventures July 1952
- * Homesickness, (vi) Amazing Stories June 1950
- * The Iapetan Night Shade, (vi) Amazing Stories April 1950
- * In Friendly Battle, (ms) Amazing Stories March 1951
- * In Perfect Health, (ms) Fantastic Adventures November 1951
- * “Look—New Hands!”, (ms) Amazing Stories May 1950
- * Madhouse for a Nucleus, (ms) Fantastic Adventures June 1952
- * The Martian Landing, (vi) Fantastic Adventures March 1950
- * Martian Meteorologist, (ms) Amazing Stories September 1950
- * Men Behind Amazing Stories, (bg) Amazing Stories November 1952
- * The Mental Network, (ms) Amazing Stories April 1951
- * The Nautical Egg-Beater, (ms) Amazing Stories July 1950
- * No Shock Too Great, (ms) Amazing Stories June 1951
- * Once in a Blue Moon…, (ms) Amazing Stories January 1952
- * One De-Gaussing Girdle, Please, (ms) Fantastic Adventures January 1952
- * Pushing in Reverse, (ms) Fantastic Adventures February 1952
- * “Quiet—Please!”, (ms) Fantastic Adventures May 1950
- * “Radio” Standard, (ms) Fantastic Adventures December 1949
- * The Roads Can Roll!, (ms) Amazing Stories April 1952
- * “Ruggedizing”, (ms) Amazing Stories February 1951
- * Rule of Thumb, (ms) Fantastic Adventures March 1952
- * A Scientist’s Warning!, (ms) Fantastic Adventures October 1950
- * Snow, Beautiful Snow, (ms) Fantastic Adventures January 1953
- * Soldiers of Lilliput, (ms) Fantastic Adventures August 1949
- * Space School, (vi) Fantastic Adventures February 1950
- * Spoor from Space!, (ms) Fantastic Adventures July 1951
- * Star-Shots, (ms) Fantastic Adventures March 1951
- * A Star to Wish On, (ms) Fantastic Adventures September 1952
- * Sub-Killer, (vi) Fantastic Adventures July 1950
- * Symbolic Logic, (ms) Fantastic Adventures August 1951
- * Theory Into Fact, (ms) Amazing Stories October 1952
- * This’ll Haunt You, (ms) Fantastic Adventures November 1949
- * This Modern Age…, (ms) Fantastic Adventures September 1951
- * Tiny Typer, (ms) Fantastic Adventures January 1953
- * The Wager, (ms) Amazing Stories March 1950
- * Walking Television, (ms) Amazing Stories November 1952
- * What’s in a Word?, (ms) Amazing Stories January 1951
- * “You Rascal, You”, (ms) Fantastic Adventures June 1951
[]Keeble, Helen (fl. 2000s-2010s) (chron.)
- * After the Reformation: Interviews with the Grammarians (Selected Extracts), (ss) Farthing #5, January 2007
- * In Ashes, (ss) Strange Horizons April 7 2008
- * In Stone, (ss) Strange Horizons September 10 2007
- * A Journal of Certain Events of Scientific Interest from the First Survey Voyage of the Southern Waters by HMS Ocelot, As Observed by Professor Thaddeus Boswell, D.Phil, MSc.; or, A Lullaby, (ss) Strange Horizons Jun 1, Jun 8 2009
[]Keefauver, John D(avid) (1923-2013) (chron.)
- * Aesop’s Apples, (ss) Adam Bedside Reader #22, 1966
- * Body Ball, (ss) Omni January 1981
- * Boom-Boom the Belly Dancer, (ss) Cad June 1965
- * Bring Back Bras, (ss) Debonair #11, August 1966
- * Candy Skulls, (ss) Pulpsmith Spring 1987
- * A Case of Double Deception, (ss) Adam Bedside Reader #21, 1965
- * The China Choppers Caper, (ss) Body Shop v3 #3, 1966
- * The Chocolate Man, (ss) Eternity #4, 1975
- * A Consultation of Cuckolds, (vi) Wildcat July 1967
- * Cutliffe Starkvogel and the Bears Who Liked TV, (ss) The Best of the West ed. Joe R. Lansdale, Doubleday, 1986
- * Dead Voices Live, (ss) Dark at Heart ed. Joe R. & Karen Lansdale, Dark Harvest, 1992
- * Dial Joe for Revenge, (ss) Spree v2 #1, 1964
- * Drink to Death, (ss)
- * Escape, (ss) Rod Serling’s The Twilight Zone Magazine July 1981
- * The Eyes of Her Lovers, (ss) Cloud 9 v4 #1, 1967
- * Giant on the Beach, (ss) Omni April 1980
- * Give Me Your Cold Hand, (ss) The Sixth Pan Book of Horror Stories ed. Herbert van Thal, Pan, 1965
- * The Great Moveway Jam, (ss) Omni March 1979
- * The Great Three-Month Super Supersonic Transport Stack-Up of 1999, (ss) Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories to Stay Awake By ed. Alfred Hitchcock, Random House, 1971
- * Harvey’s Smile, (ss) Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine June 1981
- * The Heart Has Eyes, (ss) Broadside October 1966
- * Henry Littlefinger’s Wondrous Wang, (hu) Knight January 1976
- * How Henry J. Littlefinger Licked the Hippies’ Scheme to Take Over the Country by Tossing Pot in Postage Stamp Glue, (ss) National Review October 22 1971
- * An Increase of Reputation and Romp, (ss) Wildcat February 1968
- * Kali, (ss) The Fifth Pan Book of Horror Stories ed. Herbert van Thal, Pan, 1964
- * Kill for Me, (ss) Masques III ed. J. N. Williamson, St. Martin's, 1989
- * The Last Experiment, (ss) The Seventh Pan Book of Horror Stories ed. Herbert van Thal, Pan, 1966
- * Louis and the Sexpot, (ss) Debonair #16, May 1967
- * Mareta, (ss) The Seventh Pan Book of Horror Stories ed. Herbert van Thal, Pan, 1966
- * The Most Precious, (ss) The Eighth Pan Book of Horror Stories ed. Herbert van Thal, Pan, 1967
- * Neutron Warhead vs. Mustard Gas, (ar) Pulpsmith Winter 1981
- * Panama by Bus, (hu) Swank April 1972
- * Paste a Smile on a Wall, (ss) The Smith #15, 1974
- * The Pile of Sand, (ss) 1971
- * The Rocks That Moved, (ss) Omni July 1979
- * Scream!, (ss) The 15th Pan Book of Horror Stories ed. Herbert van Thal, Pan, 1974
- * She Lost It, (hu) Topper December 1975
- * Snow, Cobwebs, and Dust, (ss) Shadows 4 ed. Charles L. Grant, Doubleday, 1981
- * Special Handling, (ss) Alfred Hitchcock Presents: A Month of Mystery ed. Alfred Hitchcock, Random House, 1969
- * Spring Revival, (ss) Caper January 1960
- * The Story of Ann-O, (ss) Broadside February 1967
- * The Strumpet’s Five Boxes, (vi) Topper December 1975
- * The Tale of the Chest, (vi) Wildcat May 1970
- * Technique of the Brush-Off, (hu) Yes v2 #1, 1968
- * Thanks…, (ss) Decade of Short Stories v10 #3, 1950
- * Torrid Tales of Lust and Passion, (hu) Monsieur October 1967
- * Twice Satisfied Wife, (ss) Daring June 1969
- * Uncle Harry’s Flying Saucer Swimming Pool, (ss) The New Frontier ed. Joe R. Lansdale, Doubleday, 1989
- * The Ventriloquist, (ss) Pulpsmith Summer 1985
- * A Wife’s Substitute, (ss) French Frills v3 #3, 1964
- * The Woman in the Bottle, (ss) Adam November 1965
- * The Wonderful Story of Over-Thirty Bodies, (hu) Adam Bedside Reader #41, November 1969
- * [biographical sketch], (bg) Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine June 1981
_____, adapt.
_____, [ref.]
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