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prokopetz: prokopetz: Rape is the only crime on the books for which arguing that the temptation to commit it was too clear and obvious to resist is treated as a defence. For every other crime, we call that a confession. I’ve gotten more angry asks
The Key To Nicholas Street, by Stanley Ellin (Dell, 1952) From a box of books bought on Ebay.
‘Til Death, by Ed McBain (Permabooks, 1960).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
“He had enough guts for 3 guys, enough lives for 9 cats.” The Name Of The Game Is Death, by Dan J. Marlowe (Gold Medal, 1963).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Four For The Money, by Dan J. Marlowe (Fawcett, 1966).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Strongarm, by Dan J. Marlowe (Fawcett, 1963).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Route Of The Red Gold, by Dan J. Marlowe (Fawcett, 1967).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Dead PIgeon On Beethoven Street, by Samuel Fuller (Pyramid, 1974).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Doubles In Death, by William Grew (Permabooks, 1955).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Murder On Angler’s Island, by Helen Reilly (Dell, 1945).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
The Girl, The Gold Watch, And Everything, by John D. MacDonald (Gold Medal, 1962).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Port Of Call, by Wallace Reyburn (Panther, 1957).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
The Doll’s Bad News, by James Hadley Chase (Panther, 1974).From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Who Rides A Tiger, by Doris Miles Disney (Zebra Books, 1989).From Oxfam in Nottingham.
Pick-Up On Noon Street, by Raymond Chandler (Pocket Books Inc, 1965).From Ebay.
A Hell Of A Woman, by Jim Thompson (Corgi, 1988)From a box of books bought on Ebay.
Here’s Blood In Your Eye, by Manning Long (Pocket Book Edition, 1953).From Ebay.
The Hollow Man, by John Roeburt (Graphic Books, 1955).From Ebay.
Man On A Leash, by Charles Williams (Thriller Book Club, 1975)From Ebay.
The Line-Up, by Helen Reilly (Manor Books, 1977).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Trusting Victim, by Dana Lyon (Ace Books, 1964)From Ebay.
The Thursday Turkey Murders, by Craig Rice (Pocket Books, 1948).From Ebay.
The Sunday Pigeon Murders, by Craig Rice (Tower Books, 1945).From a bookshop on Charing Cross Road, London.
Cats Prowl At Night, by A.A. Fair (Dell, 1949). Cover art by Gerald B. Gregg.From Ebay.
Never A Dull Moment, by Peter Cheyney (Fontana, 1961).From a box of books left out on the road during the Coronavirus pandemic.
The World In My Pocket, by James Hadley Chase (Thriller Book Club, 1958).From eBay.
Play It Hard, by Gil Brewer (Priory Books, c. early 70s).From eBay.
Young Man, I Think You’re Dying, by Joan Fleming (Fontana, 1973).From a second-hand book shop in Cromford, Derbyshire.
The Case Of The Abominable Snowman, by Nicholas Blake (Hamlyn, 1981).From a second-hand book stall in Scarborough.
The Black-Eyed Stranger, by Charlotte Armstrong (Pocket Books, 1952)From eBay
So Evil My Love, by Joseph Shearing (Pocket Books, 1948).From eBay.
Hit And Run, by Richard Deming (Prirory Books, 196?)From eBay.
Halo in Brass, by John Evans (Pocket Books, 1950).From eBay.
The G-String Murders, by Gypsy Rose Lee (Pocket Books, 1947).From eBay.
Hit And Run, by Richard Deming (Pocket Books, 1960).From eBay.
Penance For Jerry Kennedy, by George V. Higgins (Abacus, 1985).From a book shop on Charing Cross Road, London.
aiffe: donotchoosesidesyet: the tl;dr version of that long post is this: People write stories about things they don’t support in real like. They write about crime and violence and abuse. These writers are sometimes victims and survivors themselves.
a-rinna: saw a comment someone made on a post saying “it’s not possible to read dark fiction and not have that affect your morals, you can’t train your brain NOT to normalize those things!” and i completely agree as a life-long crime fiction
hellokristenx: amordelfriki: prokopetz: prokopetz: Rape is the only crime on the books for which arguing that the temptation to commit it was too clear and obvious to resist is treated as a defence. For every other crime, we call that a confession.
hellokristenx: chamelion-circuit: amordelfriki: prokopetz: prokopetz: Rape is the only crime on the books for which arguing that the temptation to commit it was too clear and obvious to resist is treated as a defence. For every other crime, we call
denzelpatches: prokopetz: prokopetz: Rape is the only crime on the books for which arguing that the temptation to commit it was too clear and obvious to resist is treated as a defence. For every other crime, we call that a confession. I’ve gotten
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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,
amordelfriki: prokopetz: prokopetz: Rape is the only crime on the books for which arguing that the temptation to commit it was too clear and obvious to resist is treated as a defence. For every other crime, we call that a confession. I’ve gotten
hellokristenx:chamelion-circuit: amordelfriki: prokopetz: prokopetz: Rape is the only crime on the books for which arguing that the temptation to commit it was too clear and obvious to resist is treated as a defence. For every other crime, we call
doctaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa: Tyrion stared up at his father’s hard green eyes with their flecks of cold bright gold. “Guilty,” he said, “so guilty. Is that what you wanted to hear?” […] “I am guilty of a more monstrous crime.” He took
mudwerks: (via Killer Covers: July 2014) At first I thought this was the same true-crime book that I had read 15 years ago. Same title, but after looking it up I figured out it had different authors. Was about a woman who was captured by this couple
A new vending machine has been released which can print any book within minutes.The Espresso Book Machine has access to 500,000 different books - the same as 23.6 miles of shelf space - and can even churn out a fresh copy of Crime and Punishment in just