Recent Posts
Friday’s Forgotten Book: A Trouble of Fools by Linda Barnes
The female private investigator, as opposed to the amateur sleuth, has been a relatively rare occurrence in crime fiction but she has popped up here and there. Loveday Brooke is an early "lady detective" created by Catherine Louisa Pirkis in 1894. Canadian writer...
Friday’s Forgotten Book: Blue Murder by Harriet Rutland
Among the authors who tantalized readers with a few good mysteries and then disappeared is Olive Seers Shimwell (1901-1962) who published three mysteries under the name Harriet Rutland. She produced Knock, Murderer, Knock (Skeffington & Son, 1938); Bleeding...
Friday’s Forgotten Book: Uncle Paul by Celia Fremlin
Celia Fremlin (1914–2009) was a British graduate of Oxford, Somerville College, same as Dorothy L. Sayers. She published two sociological books about the effects of the war on everyday people before turning to psychological thrillers that focused on domestic...
Friday’s Forgotten Book: Patterns in the Dust by Lesley Grant-Adamson
Lesley Grant-Adamson is a British writer of mystery fiction. She wrote for magazines and newspapers before becoming a full-time freelancer. Besides crime novels, she has written television scripts, poetry, magazine articles, and short stories. Her...
Friday’s Forgotten Book: Unholy Dying by R. T. Campbell
Ruthven Campbell Todd (1914–1978) was a Scottish poet, artist, and novelist. (Ruthven is pronounced 'riven'.) During World War II he wrote about a dozen detective novels. He used a pseudonym at the advice of Cecil Day Lewis, who also had a pen name for his...
Friday’s Forgotten Book: The Death Syndicate by Judson P. Philips
Judson Philips, also writing as Hugh Pentecost and Philip Owen, started his literary career with short stories for pulp magazines. His first book about Inspector Luke Bradley, Cancelled in Red(Dodd Mead, 1939), won the Red Badge Prize and his novelist career began....
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who still reads at every opportunity and loves to talk about what she is reading.