- "Jeffrey Ashford" (Roderic Jeffries), Counsel for the Defense. Mystery, the first of many Jeffries wrote under that name. This is a Collier paperback; has there ever been a paperback publisher with covers poorer than Collier?
- George Baxt, Topsy and Evil. Mystery. Third in the Pharoah Love series.
- William Peter Blatty, I'll Tell Them I Remember You. Memoir.
- Simon Brett, editor, The Faber Book of Parodies. Satire. Ninety-one poems, stories, oddments, and scraps.
- Poppy Z. Brite, The Devil You Know. Horror collection with sixteen stories.
- James M. Cain, Past All Dishonor. Historical novel.
- Hugh B. Cave, The Lower Deep. E-book. Horror.
- Jerome Charyn, Pinocchio's Nose. Novel.
- Agatha Christie, Six Mary Westmacott Novels. Omnibus of the six novels Christie wrote under the Westmacott pseudonym: Giant's Bread, Absent in the Spring, Unfinished Portrait, The Rose and the Yew Tree, A Daughter's a Daughter, and The Burden.
- Richard Dalby, editor, Mistletoe & Mayhem: Horrific Tales for the Holidays. Horror anthology. Thirteen tales, old and new, witha bright spot being a 70-page original story by Basil Copper.
- Paul Gallico, The Man Who Was Magic. Fantasy novel.
- Walter Gibson, The Shadow: A Quarter of Eight & The Freak Show Murders. Pulp adventure novels, original published under the "Maxwell Grant" house name. From 1945 and 1944, respectively. The Shadow: Servants of Siva & The Madrigals of Mystery. Volume 12 in anthony Tollin's series, originally published as by "Maxwell Grant" in 1938 and 1949, respectively.
- Chris Grabenstein, The Crossroads. YA Horror novel.
- Wyman Guin, The Standing. SF.
- Elizabeth Hand, 12 Monkeys. Movie tie-in novel.
- "Cyril Hare" (Alfred Alexander Gordon Clark), Suicide Excepted and Tenant for Death. Golden Age whodunnits.
- Charles L. Harness, Wolfhead. SF.
- James Herbert, Shrine. Horror.
- William Hope Hodgson, The Lost Poetry of William Hope Hodgson and The Wandering Soul. E-books. The first covers three poetry books that Hodgson had written but had never published before his death in World War I; it contains most of the poems included in his first posthumous poetry book. The second contains miscellania by and about Hodgson. Both were edited by Jane Frank. A treasure trove for Hodgson freaks like me.
- Peter James, Alchemist. Thriller with horror/SF overtones.
- Dan Jolley, World of Warcraft: Death Knight. YA graphic novel gaming tie-in. Art by Rocio Zucchi.
- Stana Leicht, Of Blood and Honey. E-book. Fantasy.
- A. J. Liebling, The Jollity Building. Nonfiction. Four articles from The New Yorker.
- Peter Lovesey, The Reaper. Mystery.
- Frank D. McSherry, Jr., Charles G. Waugh, and Martin H. Greenberg, editors, More Dixie Ghosts. Horror anthology in the American Ghosts series. Fourteen stories.
- Marlys Millhiser, Nightmare Country. Horror.
- Walter Moudy, No Man on Earth. SF.
- Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir, The Best of the Destroyer. Omnibus of three men's adventure novels in the Destroyer series: Chinese Puzzle, Slave Safari, and Assassin Playoff.
- Lara Parker, Dark Shadows: The Salem Branch. TV tie-in novel written by the woman who played "Angelique" in the series.
- Terry Pratchett, The Truth. Discworld fantasy. This one is an ARC from 2000.
- Derek Raymond, He Died With His Eyes Open. Mystery. The first Factory novel.
- J. D. Rhoades, Lawyers, Guns and Money. E-book. Mystery.
- "Kenneth Robeson" (Paul Ernst), The Avenger #15 House of Death, #17 Nevlo, and #21 The Happy Killers. Pulp novel reprints from 1941-2. Ernst wrote all the ones for the magazines; Ron Goulart continued the series in paperback with #25.
- Wayne Allen Sallee, For You the Living. E-book. Horror collection.
- Noel Scanlon, Black Ashes. horror.
- Sharon Shinn, The Shape-Changer's Wife. Fantasy.
- Mark Stammers & Stephen James Walker, editors. Doctor Who: Decalog: Ten Stories, Seven Doctors, One Enigma. TV tie-in.
- Steve Vernon, Red Valentines. E-book. Horror collection with three stories.
- Charles Wilson, Extinct. Thriller.
- Dave Zeltserman, Bad Thoughts. E-book. Mystery.
Monday, February 20, 2012
INCOMING
Kitty dropped her phone this week and broke it. So off to the phone store we went and came back with smart phones that came with a Kindle app. And so, by golly, there are some e-books on this list.
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