- Piers Anthony and Robert E. Margroff, Dragon's Gold. Fantasy.
- Wyatt Blassingame, The U. S. Frogmen of World War II. YA non-fiction from a prolific pulp writer. #106 in the U.S. Landmark series from Random House.
- Lawrence Bloch, editor, Opening Shots. Anthology of 19 "first" stories (the jacket copy mistakenly said 20 stories) from crime and mystery writers.
- Ben Bova, The Precipice. SF.
- Martin Caidin, Aquarius Mission. Science fiction techno-thriller.
- Harry Carmichael, Naked to the Grave. A Piper and Quinn mystery from a prolific British author little known here.
- Caleb Carr, The Italian Secretary: A Further Adventure of Sherlock Holmes. 'Nuf said.
- "E. V. Cunningham" (Howard Fast), The Case of the Kidnapped Angel. A Masao Masuto mystery.
- Cliff Farrell, Comanch'. Western.
- Esther Friesner, Temping Fate. Fantasy.
- Zane Grey, George Washington, Frontiersman. Historical novel first published 55 years after the author's death.
- William W. Johnstone, D-Day in the Ashes and Wind in the Ashes. Post-apocalyptic thrillers.
- William W. Johnstone, with J. A. Johnstone, Six Ways from Sunday. Western.
- Emma Lathan, Green Grow the Dollars. A John Putnam Thatcher mystery.
- Nancy Martin, Our Lady of Immaculate Deception. The first Roxy Abruzzo mystery.
- Patricia Moyes, A Six-Letter Word for Death. A Henry Tibbett mystery.
- Warren Murphy, Scorpion's Dance. Thriller.
- Otto Penzler, 101 Greatest Movies of Mystery and Suspense. Nonfiction.
- Felice Picano, Smart as the Devil. Horror.
- Jerry Pournelle, creator, with editorial assistance from John F. Carr, War World, Vol. III: Sauron Dominion. Shared world anthology of eight stories.
- William Rabkin, Psych: A Mind Is a Terrible Thing to Read. TV tie-in.
- Quentin Reynolds, The F.B.I. YA nonfiction; #56 in the U. S. Landmark series from Random house.
- Fred Saberhagen and Roger Zelazny, Coils. SF.
- Donald J. Sobol, Two-Minute Mystery Collection. Omnibus of three books (Two-Minute Mysteries, More Two-Minute Mysteries, and Still More Two-Minute Mysteries) from the author of the Encyclopedia Brown stories.
- Charles Stross, Halting State. SF.
- Ian Watson, The Martian Inca. SF.
Also, Dawn added a couple of books to the pile in exchange for some chili and two of Kitty's peppermint brownies:
- Bret Halliday, Never Kill a Client. A 1962 Mike Shayne mystery, so it's actually written by Halliday.
- Carly Phillips, The Bachelor. I suspect this one's chick lit because the cover is embossed with lipstick kisses and the cover copy asks, "Will this bad boy make it to the altar?"
No comments:
Post a Comment