This is not the character of the same name from the comic books. This is a horror and suspense tale of a man who becomes a bat --- or is it the other way around?
Monday, December 28, 2020
Basil by Wilkie Collins
In Basil's secret and unconsummated marriage to the linen-draper's sexually precocious daughter, and the shocking betrayal, insanity, and death that follow, Wilkie Collins reveals the bustling, commercial London of the 19th century wreaking its vengeance on a still powerful aristocratic world. This is a mystery and a novel of sexual suspense and experimentation, early for its time.
Ambrose Lavendale, Diplomat by E. Phillips Oppenheim
Mr
Ambrose Lavendale. a young English-American diplomat, leaves the
Embassy service to work as a secret agent in London during World War
One. He meets Mlle. Suzanne de Frayne, who is similarly employed by the
French, while he is shadowing a scientist who has developed a formula
for a lethal gas explosive. In a series of connected stories, the pair
uncover German spies, foil plots to divert munitions from the Allies,
steal secret weapons, and fall in love.
Saturday, December 19, 2020
Barbara Winslow Rebel by Elizabeth Ellis
Sunday, November 15, 2020
Backfire by Dan Marlowe
Tuesday, September 8, 2020
A Broken Bond by Nicholas Carter
Monday, August 24, 2020
Ambrotox and Limping Dick by Oliver Fleming
Oliver Fleming was a pseudonym used by the British authors Ronald MacDonald (1860-1933) and his son Philip MacDonald (1900-1980). Works published under this name include Ambrotox and Limping Dick (1920) and The Spandau Quid (1923). Philip MacDonald also wrote as Anthony Lawless, Martin Porlock, W. J. Stuart and Warren Stuart. His detective novels, particularly those featuring his series detective Anthony Gethryn, are primarily whodunnits with the occasional locked room mystery. His novel X. V. Rex (1933), aka The Mystery of the Dead Police, is an early example of what has become known as a serial killer novel. In later years Philip MacDonald wrote television scripts for Alfred Hitchcock Presents (Malice Domestic, 1957) and Perry Mason (The Case of the Terrified Typist, 1958).
Thursday, August 6, 2020
Hidden Foes by Nicholas Carter
Hidden Foes by Nicholas Carter
It beginsL
"
Nobody had heard the report of a pistol.
There had been no disturbance; in fact, no audible altercation, no startling cry for help, or even a groan of sudden, terrible distress.
The man lay there as motionless, nevertheless, as if felled by a thunderbolt. His life had been snuffed out like the flame of a candle by the fury of a whirlwind. Death had come upon him like a bolt from the blue. By slow degrees his face underwent a change—but it was not the change that ordinarily follows sudden death, that peaceful calm that marks the end of earthly toil and trouble.
Instead, the smoothly shaven skin seemed to shrink and wither slightly over the dead nerves and lifeless muscles, and a singular slaty hue that was hardly perceptible settled around his lips and nostrils, partly dispelling the first deathly pallor. It was as if the blast from a furnace, or the searing touch of a fiery hand, had withered and parched it."
Saturday, July 25, 2020
The Holladay Case by Burt E. Stevenson
Thursday, July 23, 2020
The House of Mystery by William Henry Irwin
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
The Mouse in the Mountain by Norbert Davis
- Doan is a detective and Carstairs his enormous canine companion (don't call him a "pet"), and in this first hard-boiled adventure they travel to Mexico, along with an heiress, a revolutionary, an artist, and more than a few mysteries.