Small House of Everything

Small House of Everything

Monday, July 1, 2013

INCOMING

  • Catherine Aird, Parting Breath.  A C. D. Sloan mystery.
  • Marvin H. Albert, The V.I.P.s.  Movie tie-in novel.
  • W.T. Ballard, Murder Las Vegas Style.  Crime novel.
  • Pierre Bayard, Sherlock Holmes Was Wrong.  Non-fiction.
  • "John Boyd" (Boyd Upchurch), The Girl with the Jade Green Eyes.  SF.
  • "Carter Brown" (Alan G. Yates), The Iron Maiden, Night Wheeler, and The Seven Sirens.  Mystery novels featuring Larry Baker, Al Wheeler, and Randy Roberts, respectively.
  • Lois McMaster Bujold, A Civil Campaign and The Vor Game.  SF novels in the Vorkosigan series.  And The Spirit Ring, a fantasy.
  • "Jonathan Burke" (John Burke), Goodbye, Gillian.  Romantic mystery originally published as The Weekend Girls.
  • Alan Caillou, Terror in Rio.  Men's adventure novel, second in The Private Army of Colonel Tobin series.
  • Jeffrey Caine, The Constant Gardener:  The Shooting Script.  Based on the John le Carre novel.
  • Scott Ciencin, Tantras.  Gaming (Forgotten Realms) tie-in novel.  Book II in the Avatar series.
  • Greg Cox, 52 and Final Crisis.  Comic book tie-in novels.
  • John Creasey, Alibi and The Toff at Buntlin's.  Mysteries, the first with Roger West and the second with the Toff.
  • Chet Cunningham, The Specialists:  Deadly Strike.  Men's action adventure, third in the series.
  • Elaine Cunningham, Daughter of the Drow.  Gaming (Forgotten Realms) tie-in novel.  Book 1 in the Starlight & Shadows series.
  • Lionel Davidson, The Sun Chemist.  Thriller.
  • Carol Davis & Esther D. Reese,   Quantum Leap:  Mirror's Edge.  Television tie-in novel.
  • Erik Scott de Bie, Depths of Madness.  Gaming (Forgotten Realms) tie-in novel in The Dungeons series.
  • Peter Dickinson, The Ropemaker.  YA fantasy.
  • "Robert Doherty" (Robert Mayer), Area 51.  Thriller.
  • Paul W. Fairman, The Partridge Family #4:  The Ghost of Graveyard Hill. Television tie-in novel.
  • Julius Fast, The League of Grey-Eyed Women.  SF.
  • Alan Dean Foster, The Metrognome & Other Stories.  SF/fantasy collection with fifteen stories.
  • Esther Friesner, New York by Knight.  Fantasy.
  • Roger Fuller, Ordeal.  Television (The Defenders) tie-in novel.
  • Neil Gaiman, American Gods.  Fantasy.
  • Christopher Golden, The Borderkind.  Fantasy, the second book of the Veil.
  • James Gunn, Kampus. SF.
  • Carolyn Haines, Revenant.  Horror.
  • Donald Hamilton, The Intimidators.  Spy guy.  Matt Helm #15.
  • "Leonard Holton" (Leonard Wibberly), A Pact with Satan.  A Father Bredder mystery.
  • Michael Jahn, Murder on the Waterfront.  A Bill Donovan mystery.
  • Richard Jessup, A Quiet Voyage Home.  Novel.
  • Langdon Jones & Michael Moorcock, editors, The New Nature of the Catastrophe. SF collection of Jerry Cornelius stories by Moorcock and Others.  Twenty-eight stories, a fourteen-part comic story, and some odds and ends.
  • Melanie Kent, Quantum Leap:  Heat Wave.  Television tie-in novel.
  • "Paul Kenyon" (Donald Moffitt), The Baroness:  Death Is a Ruby Light.  Spy girl.  Number three in the series.
  • Hideyki Kikuchi, Vampire Hunter D:  The Stuff of Dreams.  Horor.
  • Elmore Leonard, Three-Ten to Yuma.  Western collection culled from The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard.  Seven stories.
  • Jeff Lindsay, Dexter Is Delicious.  Crime novel with everyone's favorite serial killer.
  • Edgar Lustgarten, One More Unfortunate.  Mystery; number 28 in the Dell Great Mystery Library.
  • Giles A. Lutz, The Hardy Breed.  Western.
  • Jonathan Maberry, Bad Moon Rising.  Horror.
  • Ken MacLeod, Newton's Wake.  SF.
  • Cynthia Manson & Charles Ardai, editors, High Adventure.  Mystery/SF anthology with twenty-seven stories, mainly from the Davis magazines:  EQMM, AHMM, Asimov's, and Analog.
  • Lee McKeone, Ghoster.  SF.
  • John Mortimer, "selector," Famous Trials.  Nonfiction.  Nine selections from the Famous Trials series edited by Harry Hodge & James H. Hodge
  • "P. T. Olemy," The Clones.  SF.  An obvious pseudonym, but for whom?
  • Edith Pargeter, The Eighth Champion of Christiandom.  WWII novel.
  • "Simon Quinn" (Martin Cruz Smith) - The Human Factor.  Movie tie-in novel.
  • "Spencer Quinn" (Peter Abrahams), Dog On It.  Mystery, the first in the Chet and Bernie series.
  • Anne Rice, Called Out of Darkness:  A Spiritual Confession.  Autobiography about how she found her way back to Christ.  Written before she quit Christianity and became a secular humanist.
  • Stephen Robinett, Projections.  SF collection with nine stories.  An Analog book.
  • Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Paloma.  SF novel in the Retrieval Artist series.
  • Fred Saberhagen, The Golden People.  SF novel, a major expansion of the 1964 edition.
  • R. A. Salvatore, Exile.  Gaming (Forgotten Realms) tie-in novel.  Book two of the Dark Elf trilogy.
  • Gordon F. Sander, Serling:  The Rise and Twilight of Television's Last Angry Man.  Biography.
  • John Saul, House of Reckoning.  Horror.
  • "Sandy Schofield" (Dean Wesley Smith & Kristine Kathryn Rusch), Quantum Leap:  Loch Ness Leap.  Television tie-in novel.
  • Sharon Shinn, The Shape-Changer's Wife.  Fantasy.
  • Chris Stratton, Emergency!  Television tie-in novel.
  • "V. A. Stuart" (Vivian Stuart) - Hazard's Command.  Historical/nautical/war novel, third in the series.
  • Louis Untermeyer, editor, A Treasury of Ribaldry, Volume 1.  antology with many poems, snippets, stories, and aphorisms.
  • Jack Vance, Lyonesse:  Suldrum's Garden.  Fantasy.
  • William D. Westervelt, Hawaiian Legends of Ghosts and Ghost-Gods.  Folklore.
  • Kaye Wilhelm, Sleight of Hand.  A Barbara Holloway mystery.
  • Connie Willis, editor, Nebula Awards 33.  SF anthology with eighteen stories, poems, articles, and excepts.
  • David Wilson, McCloud #4:  The Corpse Maker.  Television tie-in novel.
  • Marv Wolfman, Crisis on Infinite Earths.  Comic book tie-in novel.
  • T. M. Wright, The Eyes of the Carp.  Horror, number 15 in the Cemetery Dance Novella Series.
  • Philip Wylie, The Smuggled Atom Bomb.  Thriller.

1 comment:

  1. A particularly good bunch. I wonder if anyone remembers Philip Wylie.I most remember THE DISAPPEARANCE when all the men and women are separated one day.

    ReplyDelete