The FictionMags Index
Index by Name: Page 6171
Previous —
Name Index —
Table-of-Contents
[]Lewin, Oscar (fl. 1940s) (chron.)
- * The Builder, (pm) Masters of the Sky, Junior Press Ltd., 1944
- * My Critic, (pm) Hero of the Air, Junior Press Ltd., 1944
- * Peter Prout, (pm) Hero of the Air, Junior Press Ltd., 1944
- * A Pig Who Went to Black Market, (pm) The Pathfinder ed. C. S. Segal, Junior Press Ltd., 1944
[]Lewin, Ted (1935- ) (about) (chron.)
- * [front cover], (cv) Champion for Men June 1959
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Boys’ Life May 1954, Apr 1957, Mar, Jul 1958, Jan 1960, Jun 1961, Feb, Jul 1962, Feb 1963
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Man’s Magazine November 1959
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Bluebook for Men February 1961
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Climax Mar, Jun 1961, Aug 1962
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Adventure Oct, Dec 1963, Feb, Aug, Oct 1964, Feb 1965, Jun 1967, Apr 1971
[]Lewing, Anthony Charles (1933-2013); used pseudonym Mark Bannerman (about) (chron.)
- * The Beckoning Land, (ss) International Storyteller #46, August 1964, as by Mark Bannerman
- * The Confession, (ss) John Creasey’s Mystery Bedside Book 1976 ed. Herbert Harris, Hodder & Stoughton, 1975, as by Mark Bannerman
- * Day of the Knife, (ss) Adam (Australia) June 1970, as by Mark Bannerman
- * Drowned by Rocks, (ss) Fiesta, as by Mark Bannerman
- * The Hand, (ss) London Mystery Selection #83, December 1969, as by Mark Bannerman
- * No Peace for a Painter, (ss) Parade #1548, August 9 1969, as by Mark Bannerman
- * Shadow of the Guillotine, (ss) Carnival, as by Mark Bannerman
- * Trail from Iowa, (ss) International Storyteller August 1965, as by Mark Bannerman
[]Lewins, C(harles) A(rthur) W(hyatt) (1894-1956); used pseudonym Tex Rivers (chron.)
- * Crooks’ Academy, (sl) The Ranger #73 Dec 29 1934, #74 Jan 5, #75 Jan 12, #76 Jan 18, #77 Jan 26, #78 Feb 2, #79 Feb 9, #80 Feb 16, #81 Feb 23,
#82 Mar 2, #83 Mar 9 1935, as by Tex Rivers
- * The Law of the Six-Gun!, (sl) The Ranger #47 Jun 30, #55 Aug 25, #60 Sep 29, #61 Oct 6 1934, as by Tex Rivers
- * Son of a Horse Thief, (ss) Western Library #107, September 1954, as by Tex Rivers
[]Lewis, Addison (1889-?) (chron.)
- * The Black Disc, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror October 26 1917
- * The Damnable Decimal Point, (ss) Action Stories March 1922
- * “The Elevator Stops at All Floors”, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror December 7 1917
- * The End of the Lane, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror February 2 1917
- * The Lift Mystery, (ss) Hutchinson’s Mystery Story Magazine March 1923
- * The Little Spanish Count, (ss) The Bellman #657, February 15 1919
- * The Missing Button, (sl) Midnight Mysteries #15 Nov 25, #16 Dec 2 1922
- * Mrs. Dinehart, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror December 11 1919
- * The New Silhouette, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror November 2 1917
- * The 9:15, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror November 16 1917
- * People First—Blouses Second, (ss) Collier’s February 11 1922
- * The Rejected, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror October 12 1917
- * Seven Prayers, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror April 11 1919
- * The Sign Painter, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror October 5 1917
- * The Sloop of Doom, (ss) Midnight Mystery Stories #25, February 10 1923 (unpublished)
- * Spite, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror October 19 1917
- * Tangoled Proverbs, (ms) The Smart Set October 1914
- * What Good Is an Imagination?, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror November 1 1918
- * When Did You Write Your Mother Last?, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror November 9 1917
[]Lewis, Alfred Henry (1857-1914); used pseudonym Dan Quin (about) (chron.)
- * An Amiable Tyrant, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post April 16 1904
- * Andrew Carnegie, (ar) Cosmopolitan Magazine June 1908
- * The Apaches of New York:
* ___ 1, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) February 1911
* ___ 2: “Eat-’Em-Up Jack McManus”, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) March 1911
* ___ 3: “The Stag”, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) April 1911
* ___ 4: “Ike the Blood”’s Fortune, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) May 1911
* ___ 5: How Jackeen, Pressed Upon by Love and Opium, Slew the Doc, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) June 1911
* ___ 6, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) July 1911
* ___ 7: How Alma’s Baby Lost Its Fingers, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) September 1911
* ___ 8: How Harrington Was Killed, the New Brighton Wiped Out, and Paul Kelly Retired from Business, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) October 1911
* ___ 9: When Big Abrams Slugged the Monks, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) November 1911
* ___ 10: How Indian Louie, the Mysterious, Came to His End, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) December 1911
* ___ 11, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) January 1912
* ___ 12: The Cooking of Crazy Butch, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) April 1912
- * The Arduous Rescue of Mr. Thompson, (ss) Metropolitan Magazine August 1905
- * The Betrayal of a Nation, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) March 1910
- * The Betrayal of a Nation, 2: Why Mr. Taft Is with the Bosses, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) April 1910
- * The Betrayal of a Nation, 3: The Buzzing of the Presidential Bee, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) May 1910
- * Big Florrie’s Red Light War, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) November 1906
- * The Big Four in Washington Diplomacy, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post March 5 1904
- * Big Kelly, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post Apr 25, May 9, Jun 13, Aug 15 1908
- * The Bill Poole Killing in Stanwix Hall, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) August 1913
- * The Bloodshed in Astor Place, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) April 1913
- * Boanerges [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan September 1913
- * Bogg’s Experience, (ss)
- * The Boss, (sl) The Saturday Evening Post Aug 15, Aug 22, Aug 29, Sep 5, Sep 12, Sep 19, Sep 26, Oct 3, Oct 10, Oct 17,
Oct 24, Oct 31, Nov 7, Nov 14, Nov 21, Nov 28, Dec 5 1903
- * Brand Whitlock - Novelist, Lawyar, and Mayor, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post November 17 1906
- * Break a Heart and Make an Actor, (ss) The Smart Set July 1903
- * The Broadway Central Tragedy, (ar) Nation-Famous New York Murders by Alfred Henry Lewis, G. W. Dillingham, 1914
- * The Broadway-Chambers Street Murder, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) January 1913
- * Cæsar of Tobacco: The Great, Quiet, Confident Mr. Duke, (ar) Everybody’s Magazine July 1903
- * Cassidy’s Christmas Carol, (ss) The Red Book Magazine December 1910
- * Charles M. Schwab, (ar) Cosmopolitan Magazine October 1908
- * Cherokee Hall, (ss) Star Magazine February 1931
- * Cherokee Hall Plays Poker [Wolfville], (ss) Wolfville Days by Alfred Henry Lewis, Grosset & Dunlap, 1902
- * Colonel Sterett Relates Marvels, (ss)
- * The Confusion of Talky Jones [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine April 1908
- * The Cooking of Crazy Butch, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) April 1912
- * Cynthiana, Pet-Named “Original Sin” [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine July 1912
- * Dawson & Rudd, Partners [Wolfville], (ss) Wolfville by Alfred Henry Lewis, Stokes, 1897
- * A Day Off in Washington, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post February 20 1904
- * The Deep Strategy of Mr. Masterson, (ss) The Saturday Evening Post December 17 1904
- * The Delicacy of Red Dog [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine August 1912
- * The Democracy and Its Iago, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post February 27 1904
- * The Democratic Nomination, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post January 2 1904
- * The Diary of a New York Policeman, (ar) McClure’s Magazine Dec 1912, Jan, Feb 1913
- * Diplomacy in Dodge, (ss) Metropolitan Magazine April 1904
- * The Diplomacy of Danny Nugent, (ss) The Popular Magazine January 15 1910
- * Doc Peets’s Error [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine August 1907
- * The Domestic Protectorate of Missis Bill [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine November 1907
- * The Draft Riots of 1863, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) September 1913
- * The Dumb Man Rode [Wolfville], (ss) Wolfville Days by Alfred Henry Lewis, Grosset & Dunlap, 1902, as "How the Dumb Man Rode"
- * “Eat-’Em-Up Jack McManus”, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) March 1911
- * Enright’s Pard—Jim Willis [Wolfville], (ss) Wolfville by Alfred Henry Lewis, Stokes, 1897
- * The Eternal Woman [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine November 1912
- * Fatal Gratitude of Mr. Kelly, (ss) Collier’s Weekly September 17 1904
- * Field Notes of a Reformer [Smoketon Prosecutor], (ss) Pearson’s Magazine (US) February 1914
- * Fighting the Devil with Fire [Smoketon Prosecutor], (ss) Pearson’s Magazine (US) July 1914
- * Found, (vi) Short Stories May 1891, as by Dan Quin
- * From the Field Notes of a Reformer [Smoketon Prosecutor], (ss) Pearson’s Magazine (US) Mar, Apr, May, Sep 1914
- * The Game of Statehood, (ar) Appleton’s Booklovers Magazine February 1906
- * Gaynor: The Man Who Holds Brief for the People, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post July 7 1906
- * The Ghost of Sandy Cove [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine December 1907
- * Glasgow: Who Wants to Know, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post August 11 1906
- * Harvey Burdell Case, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) March 1913
- * The Head of the Finest, (ar) Cosmopolitan Magazine January 1912
- * The Heir of the Broken-O [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine October 1907
- * His Fear of Death, (ss) Metropolitan Magazine July 1904
- * The Hold-up at the Canyon Head [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine September 1908
- * Hon. Judson Harmon of Ohio, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) June 1912
- * The Hon. (?) J.W. Bailey, (ar) Cosmopolitan April 1913 [Ref. J. W. Bailey]
- * The Honorable Champ, (ar) Cosmopolitan Magazine November 1911
- * How Alma’s Baby Lost Its Fingers, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) September 1911
- * How Donahue Died, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) October 1912
- * How Harrington Was Killed, the New Brighton Wiped Out, and Paul Kelly Retired from Business, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) October 1911
- * How Indian Louie, the Mysterious, Came to His End, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) December 1911
- * How It Might Have Been Different, (ss) Metropolitan Magazine February 1905
- * How Jackeen, Pressed Upon by Love and Opium, Slew the Doc, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) June 1911
- * How Jim Britt Passed His Bill, (ss) Everybody’s Magazine November 1903
- * How Mr. Hickok Came to Cheyenne, (ss) The Saturday Evening Post March 12 1904
- * How Red Dog Came to the Rescue [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine January 1908
- * How Robinson Killed Helen Jewett and Why, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) December 1912
- * How the Dumb Man Rode [Wolfville], (ss) Wolfville Days by Alfred Henry Lewis, Grosset & Dunlap, 1902
- * How the Mocking Bird Was Won [Wolfville], (ss) Cosmopolitan Magazine February 1911
- * How Three Judges Murdered John Ury, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) November 1913
- * The Hub of the Political Wheel (Both Democrats and Republicans Centre Their Hopes on New York), (ar) The Saturday Evening Post January 9 1904
- * Hudson’s Farthest West, (ar) Cosmopolitan Magazine November 1909
- * An Idyll of the “HT”, (ss) Kansas City, MO, Star, as by Dan Quin
- * “Ike the Blood”’s Fortune, (ar) Pearson’s Magazine (US) May 1911
- * The Importance Unimportance of Mr. Hill, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post March 19 1904
- * Impressions of Mr. Roosevelt, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post February 6 1904
- * Invasion of Dodge, (ss) Collier’s Weekly April 16 1904
- * James A. O’Gorman, Senator, (ar) Cosmopolitan Magazine October 1911
- * Jaybird Bob’s Joke, (ss)
(continued)
Next —
Name Index —
Table-of-Contents