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Estleman, Loren D. [text] and Monte Nagler [photographs] (2007). Amos Walker's Detroit. Wayne State University Press, Detroit. ISBN 9780814333570. "It's a hard-boiled town," writes Estleman of Detroit in his preface, "made to order for a remaindered knight chasing truth through a maze of threats, deceptions, and inconvenient corpses.
D.D. McCall is an L.A. police detective and partner of the title character, played by Stephanie Kramer from 1985 to 1991 on the NBC series Hunter (1984 American TV series). Blue McCarron is a reclusive lesbian social psychologist appearing in two novels by Abigail Padgett , who also writes a series featuring Bo Bradley.
Lisa Gardner (born 1972) is a #1 New York Times bestselling American novelist. She is the author of more than 20 suspense novels, published in more than 30 countries. She began her career writing romantic suspense under the pseudonym Alicia Scott, before the publication of her breakout domestic thriller, The Perfect Husband, in 1997.
Kitchin went on to write three more crime novels featuring the stockbroker sleuth Malcolm Warren over the next twenty years. Kitchin’s final novel, “A Short Walk In Williams Park” was published posthumously in 1971. [7] He is best known for his four detective stories featuring amateur sleuth Malcolm Warren, a stockbroker like Kitchin.
Adam Dalgliesh (/ ˈ d æ l ɡ l iː ʃ / DAL-gleesh) is a fictional character who is the protagonist of fourteen mystery novels by P. D. James; the first being James's 1962 novel Cover Her Face. He also appears in the two novels featuring James's other detective, Cordelia Gray .
The first book of Don Pendleton's Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective series, Ashes to Ashes, was published in 1986 by Warner Books. The Ashton Ford character is a former naval officer and spy, skilled in cryptology and able to see into the future.
The Notting Hill Mystery (1862–1863) is an English-language detective novel written under the pseudonym Charles Felix, with illustrations by George du Maurier.The author's identity was never revealed, but several critics have suggested posthumously Charles Warren Adams (1833–1903), [1] [2] a lawyer known to have written other novels under pseudonyms.
Following his angering of a powerful drug lord, Bennett and his family are in a witness protection program out in the boondocks of California. Burn: 2014 Bennett investigates a high society dining club suspected of practicing ritual murder and cannibalism. #2 October 19, 2014 () [7] Alert: 2015