Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Crider was the author of the Professor Sally Good and the Carl Burns mysteries, the Sheriff Dan Rhodes series, the Truman Smith P.I. series, and wrote three books in the Stone: M.I.A. Hunter series under the pseudonym "Jack Buchanan". He was also the writer of several westerns and horror novels.
Mark Stone: MIA Hunter is a series of men's adventure novels created and outlined by Stephen Mertz [1] and co-written with Joe R. Lansdale, Michael Newton, and Bill Crider under the pseudonym "Jack Buchanan".
Bill Crider (1941–2018) Edmund Crispin (1921–1978) Amanda Cross (1926–2003), pseudonym of Carolyn Gold Heilbrun; ... Dan J. Marlowe (1914–1987) Ngaio Marsh ...
Tim Martin in The Spectator believes the novel will become a classic, "Rhodes’s book is satire of the broadest stripe: it is, in fact, the closest thing to a strip from Viz magazine that I’ve seen in novel form. The tone swerves hilariously between puerile double-entendre (there’s a running sequence of gags about ‘seeing Upper Bottom ...
Rosemary Goring of The Herald is less enamoured: "At 400-plus pages, this is the longest and, to my mind, least engaging of Rhodes's novels"..." This Is Life is anything but; the artifices of Rhodes's trade could scarcely be more pronounced, from crazy coincidences, narrow escapes and happy endings, to characters so much larger than life they ...
Mystery fiction is a literary genre in which a story's protagonist investigates a puzzling event requiring an explanation or solution. Almost all examples of mystery fiction focus on the investigation of one or more crimes and thus fall within the broader field of crime fiction.
The Trailsman is a series of short Western novels published since 1980 by Signet books, a division of New American Library. The series is still published under the name Jon Sharpe, the original author of the series, although it is now written by a number of ghostwriters under contract. The publisher releases 12 editions of the serial a year ...
Those Who Trespass: A Novel of Television and Murder (ISBN 0-7679-1381-7) is a 1998 novel by US television personality Bill O'Reilly.The story focuses on the revenge a television journalist exacts on network staff after disputes very similar to O'Reilly's real tensions with CBS (such as one involving Falklands War footage).