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Die Like A Dog, by Brett Halliday (Consul, 1963). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
One Lonely Night, by Mickey Spillane (Corgi, 1965). From a charity shop in Nottingham. MY NAME’S MIKE HAMMER I’m a private investigator, with a licence to kill; which is why they can’t touch me, even though the judge says I’m
The Deep, by Mickey Spillane (Corgi, 1965). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Recoil, by Jim Thompson (Corgi, 1988) From a charity shop in Hounslow, London. ’Jim Thompson was the king…Thompson’s vision makes him like nobody else. His is a world peopled with psychopathic killers, expensive sluts, crooked cops,
Farewell, My Lovely, by Raymond Chandler (The World Publishing Company, 1946). From a charity shop in Canterbury.
In A Lonely Place, by Dorothy B. Hughes (Bantam, 1979). From a charity shop in Canterbury.
Playback, by Raymond Chandler (Hamish Hamilton, 1958). From a charity shop in Nottingham. She was quite a doll. She wore a white belted raincoat, no hat, a well-cherished head of platinum hair, bootees to match the raincoat, a folding plastic umbrella,
Love’s Lonely Counterfeit, by James M. Cain (Corgi, 1966). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Cotton Comes To Harlem, by Chester Himes (Panther, 1969). From a charity shop in Canterbury. ‘Like a flick-knife. It is tough, weird, vicious, and quite remarkably un-put-downable…“Cotton” has a nightmarish quality, spiced with
The John Franklin Bardin Omnibus (Penguin, 1979). Contains The Deadly Percheron, The Last of Philip Banter and Devil Take The Blue-Tail Fly. From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Drowned Hopes, by Donald E. Westlake (The Mysterious Press, 1990).From The Mysterious Bookshop, New York.
Don’t Let Him Kill, by John Creasey, writing as Gordon Ashe (Corgi, 1974).From a charity shop in Sheffield.
No Bones About It, by Joan Fleming (Fontana, 1970).From a charity shop in Sheffield.
The Blue Hammer, by Ross Macdonald (Heron Books, 1981).From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Rip-Off, by Jim Thompson (Corgi, 1990). From a second-hand bookshop in Nottingham.
Fireworks: The Lost Writings, by Jim Thompson. Edited and introduced by Robert Polito and MIchael McCauley. (The Mysterious Press, 1988). From The Last Bookstore in Los Angeles.
The Baby In The Icebox, by James M. Cain (Penguin, 1981). From The Last Bookstore in Los Angeles.
Bad News, by Donald E. Westlake (Warner Books, 2001). From Amazon.
Watch Your Back, by Donald E. Westlake (Warner Books, 2005). From Amazon.
Dames Don’t Care, by Peter Cheyney. From Oxfam in Nottingham.
Yesterday Is Dead, by Dallas Barnes (Coronet, 1977). From a second-hand shop in Nottingham
Night Squad, by David Goodis (Frederick Muller Ltd. 1962). From a second-hand shop in Nottingham.
13 West Street, by Leigh Brackett (Corgi, 1962). From a second-hand shop in Nottingham.
The Dain Curse, by Dashiell Hammett (Pan Books, 1975). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Tiger In The Smoke, by Margery Allingham (Dell, 1952). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
4.50 From Paddington, by Agatha Christie. From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Hound Of Death, by Agatha Christie (Pan, 1961). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Saint In London, by Leslie Charteris (Hodder, 1962). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Third Girl, by Agatha Christie (Book Club, 1966). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
N or M? by Agatha Christie (Fontana, 1962). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Body in the Library, by Agatha Christie (Pan, 1961). From Oxfam in Nottingham.
Cogan’s Trade, by George V. Higgins (Robinson Publishing, 1989). From Amazon UK.
Pity Him Afterwards, by Donald E. Westlake (Penguin, 1970). From a second-hand bookshop in Sedbergh, Cumbria.
Spider Webs, by Margaret Millar (Penguin, 1989). From a second-hand bookshop in Sedbergh, Cumbria.
Kinds of Love, Kinds of Death by Tucker Coe a.k.a Donald Westlake (No Exit Press, 1990). From a second-hand bookshop in Sedbergh, Cumbria.
Murder Among Children by Tucker Coe a.k.a Donald Westlake (No Exit Press, 1990). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Don’t Lie To Me by Tucker Coe a.k.a Donald Westlake (Charter Books, 1972) From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Wax Apple by Tucker Coe a.k.a Donald Westlake (Sphere, 1975) From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Mortal Stakes, by Robert B. Parker (Penguin, 1975). From a second-hand bookshop in Charing Cross Road, London.
The Goodbye Look, by Ross Macdonald (Fontana, 1972). From a second-hand bookshop in Charing Cross Road, London.
Barely Seen, by Frank Kane (Mayflower-Dell, 1964).From a second-hand bookshop in Charing Cross Road, London.
Death Trick, by Richard Stevenson (Alyson Publications, 1981). From a second-hand bookshop in Charing Cross Road, London.When a sensational gay murder hits the headlines in Albany, New York, the prime suspect turns out to be a young gay activist who
One For The Road, by Fredric Brown (Corgi, 1961). From Amazon.
Madball, by Fredric Brown (Gold Medal, 1962). From Amazon.It looked like crystal, but it was only cheap glass, a come-on for the suckers who paid Doc to gaze into it and tell them tomorrow would be better. But tonight the madball might hold the secret
Homicide Sanitarium, by Fredric Brown (Dennis Macmillan, 1987). From Amazon.
Murder Can Be Fun, by Fredric Brown (Corgi, 1958). From Amazon.
Sleep With Slander, by Dolores Hitchens (Simon & Schuster, 1989). From a second-hand bookshop on Charing Cross Road, London.
The Freak Show Murders, by Fredric Brown (Dennis Macmillan Publications, 1985). Second-hand from Amazon.
The Bride Wore Black, by Cornell Woolrich (ibooks, 2001). Cover art by Jim Steranko.From a second-hand bookshop on Gozo, Malta.
The Donald E. Westlake Omnibus: 361 and Killy (Allison & Busby, 1995).From a second-hand bookshop on Gozo, Malta.
Murder Comes To Eden, by Leslie Ford (Popular Library, 1955). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye, by Horace McCoy (Midnight Classics, 1996). From eBay.
The Digger’s Game, by George V. Higgins (Pan, 1974). From eBay.
Death Claims, by Joseph Hansen (Quartet, 1974). From Sainsbury’s in Basford, Nottingham.Dave Brandstetter, the insurance-claims investigator hero of Fadeout - welcomed by The Times as ‘a homosexual without hysteria’ - is back.It begins as a routine
The Face Of The Tiger, by Ursula Curtiss (Corgi, 1961). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Wobble To Death, by Peter Lovesey (Dell, 1970). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Surfeit of Lampreys, by Ngaio Marsh (Fontana, 1961). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Before Midnight, by Rex Stout (Penguin, 1982). From a charity shop in Sherwood, Nottingham.
Skinflick, by Joseph Hansen (Panther, 1984). From Ebay.Born-again Christian and anti-porn campaigner Gerald Dawson is a murder victim. The police have a suspect in mind.All Dave Brandstetter has to do is approve Mrs Dawson’s insurance claim. But the
The Far Cry, by Fredric Brown. (Black Lizard, 1991). From Ebay.