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The Friends of Eddie Coyle, by George V. Higgins, Pan Books 1973. From a second-hand book stall, Charing Cross Road, London. “‘Look at this.’ The stocky man extended the fingers of his left hand over the gold-speckled formica tabletop.
I Was Dora Suarez by Derek Raymond, Abacus 1991. Bought from a charity shop in Nottingham. “I see now clearer than I have ever done, that my work is a matter not just of my personal honour, as if, in spite of everything, there were still a spark
Bank Shot, by Donald E. Westlake (Book Club Associates, 1972). From a charity shop in Victoria Centre, Nottingham. “May dropped backward into the sofa again; she always sat down as though she’d just had a stroke. ‘What’s the story?
Somebody Owes Me Money, by Donald E. Westlake (Hard Case Crime, 2008). From eBay. “I went up the stairs. Our six feet made complicated echoing dull rhythms on the rungs, and I thought of Robert Mitchum. What would Robert Mitchum do now, what
The Devil’s Home On Leave, by Derek Raymond (Serpent’s Tail, 1984) From eBay. After reading ‘I Was Dora Suarez’, I went and sought out the other books in Raymond’s Factory series, including this, the second. The back of the
The Holmes-Dracula File, by Fred Saberhagen (Ace Books, 1978) From a second-hand book shop on Charing Cross Road, London. From the writings of the late John H. Watson, M.D. It is with emotions doubly strange that I at last take up my pen to write
This Sweet Sickness, by Patricia Highsmith (Pan, 1960) From a charity shop in West Bridgford, Nottingham.
Start Screaming Murder, by Talmage Powell (Pocket Books Inc. 1962) From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Case of the Radioactive Redhead, by G.G. Fickling (Belmont Books, 1963) From a charity shop in Nottingham. THE PRIVATE EYE MEETS THE CURVACEOUS KOOK Two tapering legs waving straight up in the air, flaring downward into mesh-coloured buttocks
The Hot Rock, by Donald Westlake (Coronet 1972). From a charity shop in Sherwood, Nottingham. Kelp was veering all over the street, his attention distracted by his confusion over the window buttons. The left rear window rolled down, and he shouted Dortmu
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard, 1988) From a charity shop in the Broadmarsh Centre, Nottingham. The Last Good Kiss is a late-Seventies slice of hard-boiled noir. Through a landscape of ramshackle roadside bars, seedy
The Desperate Hours, by Joseph Hayes (Perma Books, 1955). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Neon Madman, by John Harvey (Sphere Books, 1977). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Cool Man, by W.R. Burnett (Fawcet, 1968). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
April Evil, by John D. MacDonald (Fawcett, 1956). From a second hand bookshop on Charing Cross Road, London. THE EXECUTIONER… The man was in his late twenties, slim and blond and erect. His suit sat well on him, expensive cloth hanging from good
Death of a Blue-Eyed Soul Brother, by B.B. Johnson (Paperback Library, 1970). From a charity shop in Canterbury, Kent.
No Need To Die, John Creasey writing as Gordon Ashe (Corgi, 1965). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Climb A Broken Ladder, by Robert Novak (Digit Books, 1956). From a charity shop in Nottingham. It had been a woman who put John Zerzanek where he was - down among the drunks on Skid Row. They didn’t even know his real name, just called him Bohunk,
Tabasco, by John B. Thompson (Beacon, 1959). From a charity shop in Nottingham. some SENORITAS are spicier than TABASCO Mexico is famed for Tabasco, the hot sauce - and for girls equally torrid. Yet his sweetheart in the States pushed Dan right into
Murder In The Madhouse, by Jonathan Latimer (No Exit Press, 1988).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Hold Back The Night, by DEsmond Leslie (Digit, 1958). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Partners in Crime, by Agatha Christie (Pan,1964). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Time For Caution, by Peter Cheyney (William Foster, 1946). From a charity shop in Sherwood, Nottingham.
Stranglehold, by Harry Carmichael (Four Square, 1964). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
A Body For McHugh, by Jay Flynn (1960, Sharon Publications). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Troublemaker, by Joseph Hansen (Grafton, 1986). From Ebay.
F.B.I. No. 521: Falcões e Pombas, by Donald Curtis (Agencia Portuguesa de Revistas, 196?). From the Feira da Ladra market in Lisbon.
F.B.I. No. 224: O Ultimao da Promocao, by Fred Hercey (Agencia Portuguesa de Revistas, 196?). From the Feira da Ladra market in Lisbon.
F.B.I. No. 91: Espectro do Passado, by Joseph Tell (Agencia Portuguesa de Revistas, 196?). From the Feira da Ladra market in Lisbon.
Gangsters! No. 39: A Ultima Mensagem, by Lewis Haroc (Agencia Portuguesa de Revistas, 1966). From the Feira da Ladra market in Lisbon.
O Tio Prodi Gioso (aka The Fabulous Clipjoint) by Fredric Brown, (Collecao Vampiro No. 56, 196?). From the Feira da Ladra market in Lisbon.
Lemmy Caution: e os agentos duplos (aka I’ll Say She Does) by Peter Cheyney, (Collecao Vampiro No.238, 196?). From the Feira da Ladra market in Lisbon.
Encontro Com Sr. Callaghan (aka The Urgent Hangman) by Peter Cheyney, (Collecao Vampiro No. 297, 196?). From the Feira da Ladra market in Lisbon.
O Holmen Poderoso (aka The Deep) by Mickey Spillane, (Collecao Vampiro No. 176, 196?). From the Feira da Ladra market in Lisbon.
Money Shot, by Christa Faust (Hard Case Crime, 2008). Cover illustration by Glenn Orbik.From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Confession, by Domenec Stansberry (Hard Case Crime, 2004). Cover illustration by R.B. Farrell.From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Location Shots, by J.F. Burke (Magnum, 1977).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Ask For Me Tomorrow, by Margaret Millar (Keyhole Crime, 1981).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Beyond This Point Are Monsters, by Margaret Millar (Keyhole Crime, 1982).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Nick Carter: The Filthy Five (Award/Tandem, 1967).From Ebay.
Black Box Thrillers: Four Novels by Fredric Brown (Zomba Books, 1983).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Black Box Thrillers: Four Novels by David Goodis (Zomba Books, 1983).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Motive For Murder, by Edson T. Hamill (Leisure Books, 1975).From a charity shop in Nottingham.This was one of the weirdest cases the police had ever seen. A psychopathic murderer was loose in Manhattan - but this time the killer was a woman.She picked
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The Weird World Of Wes Beattie, by John Norman Harris (Corgi, 1964).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Unifinished Crime, by Elisabeth Sanxay Holding (Ace Double, 1963).From Ebay.
Dream Of Fair Woman, by Charlotte Armstrong (Keyhole Crime, 1981).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Black Box Thrillers: 3 Novels by Marc Behm (Zomba Books, 1983).From a second-hand bookshop in Charing Cross Road, London.
The Bedroom Bolero, by Michael Avallone (Belmont, 1963).From a second-hand bookshop in Nottingham.
Catch-As-Catch-Can, by Charlotte Armstrong (Keyhole Crime, 1981).From Ebay.
The Double Frame, by Craig Rice (Black Dagger Crime, 1992).From Ebay.
Fright, by Cornell Woolrich (Hard Case Crime, 2007). Cover art by Arthur Suydam.From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Only Good Secretary, by Jean Potts (Black Dagger Crime, 1998).From Ebay.
Mink Is For A Minx, edited by Leo Marguiles (Dell, 1964). Cover art by Robert McGinnis.From a box of books bought on Ebay.
The D.A.’s Man, by Harold R. Danforth and James D. Horan (Permabooks, 1959).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Having Wonderful Crime, by Craig Rice (Pocket Books, 1945).From Ebay.
Death In A Million Rooms, by Pat McGerr (Crime Club, 1951).From a bookshop on Charing Cross Road, London.
No Crime For A Lady, by Zelda Popkin (Dell, 1942).From eBay.
Welcome To The Grave, by Mary McMullen (Keyhole Crime, 1981).From eBay.
sunshine112: Writing under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith, the Harry Potter creator ghostwrote a 450-page crime novel called The Cuckoo’s Calling.The book is billed as a “classic crime novel”, written in the style of P. D. James and Ruth Rendell,