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Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "Crime short stories" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total.
"Suffer the Little Children" was first published in the magazine Cavalier in February 1972. [citation needed] It was originally planned to be published in King's first collection of short stories, Night Shift, in 1978, but editor Bill Thompson opted to cut it for length (King had wanted to cut "Gray Matter", but deferred to Thompson's choice). [1]
This category is for mystery and detective novels written for children and young adults. Also see: Category:Junior spy novels; Category:Young adult mystery fiction; Category:Children's mystery short story collections. Also of interest: List of Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Young Adult Novel winners
AOL's True Crime channel has the latest news on serial killers, current cases, controversial murder cases and more. ... 39, shot wife Danielle and their two young kids to death, then turned his M4 ...
Short stories about organized crime, transnational, national, or local groupings of highly centralized enterprises run by criminals to engage in illegal activity, most commonly for profit. Some criminal organizations, such as terrorist groups , are politically motivated.
The Gutting of Couffignal [1] is a hardboiled crime short story by Dashiell Hammett.It has been reprinted many times in different collections, namely: The Return of the Continental Op, [2] The Big Knockover, [3] Crime Stories and Other Writings, [4] and The Big Book of the Continental Op. [5]
The Wimsey stories were popular, and successful enough for Sayers to leave the advertising agency where she was working. [5] [6] [a] Towards the end of the 1930s, and without explanation, Sayers stopped writing crime stories and turned instead to religious plays and essays, and to translations.
"The Crime Wave at Blandings" is a short story by P. G. Wodehouse that first appeared in the United States in two parts, in the October 10 and October 17, 1936 editions of the Saturday Evening Post, and in the United Kingdom in the January 1937 issue of the Strand (as "Crime Wave at Blandings").