Openers: The pink curtain hung within inches of his cheek. J could imagine sly little fox ears, sharpening, the other side of the flimsy cloth where another human being could, if he chose, listen to every word. There was no help for it. J didn't find it appropriate to whisper all the way from Chicago to southern California.
"Sophia?" (He tried to sound like himself in spite of his sense of an eavesdropper.) "Listen, don't meet the plane. I'm not gong to on it."
His wife began to wail, and he interrupted. "I'm in the damn hospital."
Sophia's voice changed immediately. "What's the matter?" she demanded.
"Not a darned thing. Ridiculous! But I'm kinda trapped. They won't let me go until to morrow."
"J, what happened to you?" Sophia's concern sounded like anger. It often did.
"All it was," he told her, "I almost got hit by a car, and do mean almost. Skinned my knee. Big deal! Seems the old biddy who was driving the car is pretty much in the chips, and she's got me hemmed in by her doctors and her lawyers. She doesn't want to get sued. So here I..."
"J, shall I come?" He could hear Sophia's mind checking off her chores. Empty the refrigerator. Call off the Neebys.
"No, no," he said. "they've already gone over me, up and down and sideways. I'd have one heck of a time developing a nice expensive injury now. I'm supposed to settle. Listen, I'm having the hotell change my nreservation to the same flight tomorrow.'
"J, are you sure>?"
"Sure I'm sure." J relaxed because he could tell that shewas relazing. "now, they insist they've got to take pictures of every bone in my hand, and it's a damned nuisance, but it's anyhow for free. Thing nis, I can't get out of here till the doctors say so."
After speaking with his wife, J (no initial, please) Middleton Little, 49, a man as innocuous as his name, decided to take a stroll through the hospital. When nhe returned to his room, he found that his former roommate had been moved. A new roommate was there, old, very sick, and unconscious. J went into the bathroom and soon heard another man enter the room. His roommate -- who had no idea -- I was in the room, regained consciousness and began talking with his visitor. Remembering his thoughts about being overheard whiloe J was talking to his wife, he decided tp remain quiet. The roommate and his visitor, each believing they were alone, had a strange conversation which J could not make much sense of. Something very important was being discussed, but what?
After the visitor left, J waited a few minutes, then exited the bathroom. His roommate realized that J had overheard all, but was not sure if J realized exactly what he had heard. His roomamte spun some sort of tale that the world was coming to an end and that scientists had prepared a spot on the moon for a few chosen survivors. He offered J seven seats to the moon to be used by his family if J promised not to reveal what he had heard. A part of J actually believed this concoction. The problem was that J had ten people in his family -- wife, children, grandchildren, and in-laws. Who would he chose to save? and who will not be saved?
Whatever the actual story was, whatever J had overheard, hinted at a vast, important secret, and j Middleton Little unconsciously held the secret to a lethal timetable, bringing this unassuming man into a web of terror and destruction.
Charlotte Armstrong (1905-1969) held the throne of the queen of domestic suspense during her long career as a writer that produced 28 novels, two short story collections, and several plays and screenplays; an additional novel and a third collection of stories were published posthumously. After writing two plays that did not fare well on Broadway, she turned to writing mystery novels, including three that featured detective MacDougal Duff. The best-selling author won an Edgar Award in 1957 for her novel A Dram of Poison. Two other novels -- The Gift Shop (1966) and Lemon in the Basket (1967) -- were also nominated for an Edgar, as were three of her short stories. Eight of her novels were either serialized or abridged in major fiction magazines of the time. Her novel The Unsuspected (1946) was filmed as Talk About a Stranger, and her novel Mischief (1951) was filmed as Don't Bother to Knock, a major vehicle for Marilyn Monroe -- and her first co-starring headlining role. Of particular note is her short story "The Enemy," a powerful and unforgettable allegory sharply criticizing McCarhy era politics.
She used the pseudonym "Jo Valentine" for her 1953 novel The Troble in Thor and published her 1941 play Ring Around Elizabeth as "Char Armstrong." Her common nickname throughout her life was "Charl."
Insight, strong characterization, and a tightening feeling of suspense were her trademarks. Here she displays them well.
Incoming:
- Charlotte Armstrong, Night Call and Other Stories of Suspense. Kindle. Posthumous collection of fifteen stories, none previously collected and two previously unpublished. Patti Abbott recently resurrected ED Gorman's spot-on review of this collection, which see. http://pattinase.blogspot.com/2023/07/night-call-and-other-stories-of.html
- John Dickson Carr, The Kindling Spark: Early Tales of Mystery, Horror, and Adventure. A collection of early stories (including ones written in his high school days) plus a short detective novel about Henri Bencolin, Carr's first series detective, and a collection of seven sketches written with Frederic Prokosh, entitled "The New Canterbury Tales." "From Little Acorns...Grow the works of extraordinary mystery writer John Dickson Carr. This collection of early works of Carr includes Grand Guignol. "The New Canterbury Tales," and eight* other works of detection, mystery, and horror by the undisputed master of the locked room mystery. Many of these stories have not appeared since their original publicarion and cover the range of mystery to horror. Dan Napolitano, noted Carr collector and authority, introduces this collection and annotates each story, providing detailed information on the origin of Carr's works along with details on how each story would be used later in Carr's career." The stories date from 1922 to 1929. *The volume I have contains only nine stories; the tenth (referenced here) was included as a chapbook story accopanying the limited hardcover edition.
- John Creasey, writing as "J. J. Marric," Gideon and the Young Toughs and Other Stories. Collection of 134 stories about George Gideon of Scotland Yard, first published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, 1969-1974. "One of Creasey['s] most beloved series included Chief Inspector George Gideon of Scotland Yard, written under the J.J. Marric pen name. The Gideon series was also the most lauded. Anthony Boucher called Gideon's Day Creasey's best work. HFR Keating included Gideon's Week in his 100 Best Crime and Mystery Books. Mystery Writers of America awarded Creasey the Edgar for Best Novel for Gideon's Fire. Gideon's Day was dramatized into a film in the late 1950s, and the books became a television series in the early 1960s. Beyond his twenty-one novels, Creasey (as Marric) wrote a series of short stories featuring the /Chief Inspector. These appeared in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine nearly 50 years ago, and this marks the first time that all of these works have been compiled into a book." Martin Edwards provides a lucid introduction to the tales, whiule Francis M. Nevins includes a short biographical piece about Creasey. Creasey's son, Richard Creasey, offers a personal tribute in an afterward.
- Bill Crider, The Blacklin County Files, Eight Stories of Sherlock Holmes, Gabby Darbins and the Slide-Rock Bolter (as by "Colby Jackson"), The Girl Who Wanted to Be Sherlock Holmes, Songbird (as by "Colby Jackson"), A Werewolf Named Wayne. "Death's Brother," "I Am a Roving Gambler: Two Stories of the West," and "What a Croc!" Phew. that's a whole bunch of Crider. I took a look at my Kindle file on my computer this week and discovered I had over 1500 titles, many of which I did not realize (or had forgetten) I had! I decided I'd better start reading some. But first...why not order some more? I mean, there were a bunch of Bill Crider books and stories I had not read. George Kelley may be George the Tempter, but Bill Crider is Bill the Tempting. (BTW, I did have two unread Criders already on the Kindle: the Rancho Diablo novel Dead Man's Revenge and the gorilla/gasbag mashup "Among nthe Anthropophagai!")
- Carolyn Kepnres, You. Suspense thriller, the basis for the Lifetime series. "When a beautiful, aspiring writer strides into the East Village bookstore where Joe Goldberg works, he does what anyone would do: he googles the name on her credit card. There is only one Guinevere Beck in New York City. she has a public Facebook account and tweets incessantly, telling Joe everything he needs to knopw: she is simply Beck to her friends, she went to Brown University, she lives on Bank Street, and she'll be at a bar in Brooklyn tonight -- the perfect place for a "chance" meeting. As Joe invisibly and obsessively takes control of beck's life, he begins quietly removing the obstacles that stand in their way. Joe will do anything to ensure Beck finds herself in his waiting arms -- even if it means murder." I'm not sure where this one came from: it showed up in a package from Amazon addressed to me. I never ordered it and there was no indication who did. Whoever sent me the book, thank you! It sounds very interesting.
- Sax Rohmer, The Voice of Kali: The Early Paul Harley Mysteries. Mystery collection thirteen short stories about Gideon Volume 3 in Black Dog Books' The Sax Rohmer Library, edited by Gene Christie. "The Game's Afoot -- and Paul Harley's on the Case! Meet Pauol Harley -- part Sherlock Holmes, part James Bond -- the man on whom the British gevernment depends to solve its most baffling mysteries. Follow Harley as he reveals the awful secret behind the disappearance of a young girl and the bizarre disfigurement of a corpse,,,uncovers a sinister plot behind an assault on a gentleman's hat,,,locates the baffling hiding place of a Chinese crime lord...battles the bewitching Madame de Medici to unmask the deadly Black Mandarin...and struggles to find and destroy a scientific super-weapon before it can be deployed by an international organization." The seven stories in this volume were originally published from 1920 to 1924. Paul Harley was the main character in Rohmer's novels Bat Wing and Fire Tongue (both 1921).
- F. Paul Wilson, The Compendium of Srem. Kindle Bibliomystery. A brief tale from Wilson's Secret History of the World, which includes his Adversary cycle, his Repairman Jack stories, and the ICE trilogy. The most evil book ever conceived has fallen into the hands of the Spanish Inquisition.
- F. Paul Wilson, Scar-Lip Redux. Graphic novel featuring Repairman Jack. The last of the Rakosh, a shape-changing, flesh eating demon for the Otherness, still lives, even though Jack he had eliminated the entire race. Jack now must end this evil once and for all. The quest takes him to the Ozymandius Prather Oddity Emporium, the house of freaks which had been the Rakosh's last home, then to a multi-millionaire lottery winner who has weaponized the creature, and finally to the mysterious and haunted Pine Barrens, where Jack faces off with the preternatural beast wicho can only be destoryed by fire or iron.
- Sergeant William Brown (1759-1808) of the 5th Copnnecticut Regiment of the Connecticut Line. Records no longer exist, but it is believed that the award was for his actions in assaulting Redoubt No. 10 in the Battle of Yorktown. He received the badge on May 3, 1783, the same day as
- Sergeant Elijah Churchill (1755-1841) of the 2nd Regiment Light Dragoons. He was cited for gallantry in action at Fort St. George on Long Island in November 1780 and at Fort Slongo in Long Island on October 2, 1781.
- Sergeant Daniel Bissell (1754-1824) of the 2nd Connecticut Regiment of the Connecticut Line received his badge on June 10, 1783. Bissell served as a spy, joining the British Army for 13 months and passing intelligence information along to the Continental Army. Under direct orders from Washington, Bissell posed as a deserter and then served in the British Infantry Corps led by Benedict Arnold. Bissell also inspired Washington in the design of the Badge of Military Merit: when dancing with his future wife at a ball, Bissell accidently stepped on her purple dress and ripped a piece from it; he then took the piece, folded it in the shape of a heart, and told his wife to hold onto it. Washington heard the story and the rest is history. Bissell's gravestone is inscribed, "He had the confidence of Washington and served under him."
- Molecule in breast milk could reduce cerebral palsy in infants https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/molecule-in-breast-milk-could-reduce-cerebral-palsy-in-infants/
- Group rescues dozens of silvery gibbons to return to the wild in the island forests of Java https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/with-only-2500-silvery-gibbons-left-group-rescues-dozens-to-return-to-island-forests-of-java/
- Man helps barbers to fill their shops with books to get kids excited about reading https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/cnn-hero-man-helps-barbers-fill-their-shops-with-books-to-help-kids-find-excitement-in-reading/
- When boy asks strangers for yard work to save up for a new game console, they file a police complaint against him, so the cops but him a new PS5 https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/gamer-cop-turns-complaint-call-against-young-man-into-opportunity-to-playtogether-online-watch/
- Molecule that kills solid cancer cells while leaving other unaffected show promise after 20 years of work https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/molecule-that-kills-most-solid-cancer-tumor-cells-leaving-others-unaffected-shows-promise-after-20-years-hard-work/
- She lost her fathers ashes but a stranger spends four hours digging through trash to find them https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/she-lost-her-fathers-ashes-but-a-stranger-digs-4-hours-through-trash-to-find-them/
- Woman spends three days crawling through storm drains trying to rescue puppies https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/houston-woman-spent-three-days-crawling-in-storm-drains-trying-to-rescue-puppies/
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