Alfred Hitchcock Presents: 16 Skeletons From My Closet
If you don't shudder with every twist and sudden thrust of these 16 terror tales…if you are able to turn off your bedside lamp after closing this volume and drift off to a deep, dreamless sleep…if you can drink your morning coffee without thinking there just might be a peculiarly bitter taste to it, or turn your back on your spouse or best friend without feeling a funny itching between your shoulder blades…then that lovable old master of menace, Alfred Hitchcock, apologizes and personally guarantees you your full payment in horror. All you have to do is meet him in the cemetery under the next murderer's moon…
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Ed McBain’s Mystery Book, No. 1, 1960
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Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine #097v018 (1951-12)
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Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine. Vol. 4, No. 2, March 1943
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Great American Detective Stories
In his spirited Introduction to a topnotch collection of Great American Detective Stories, Anthony Boucher says: “The detective short story belongs to us. It started in America and it started off magnificently. In five stories, Edgar Allan Poe created the form and almost all its possible variants... There are as many kinds of detective short stories as there are of detective novels — and you’ll find most of them here, from the ethical poetry of Melville Davisson Post to the brash foolery of Frank Gruber.”A glance at some of the titles of the stories included confirms Boucher’s modest words and guarantees that you’ll find plenty of good reading here.
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Manhunt. Volume 14, Number 1, February/March, 1966
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Masters of Noir: Volume 2
A walk on the wild side! In this series of collections of gritty Noir and Hardboiled stories, you’ll find some of the best writers of the craft writing in their prime.
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Michael Shayne Mystery Magazine. Vol. 1, No. 1. September 1956
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Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 1, May 1957 (British Edition)
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101 Mystery Stories
A collection of suspense stories, puzzle stories, whodunits and tricky whydunits involving police detectives, private eyes, talented and sometimes lucky amateurs, armchair detectives, and ethnic detectives.
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