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Sing a Song of Sixpence (short story) The Soul of the Croupier; Story of the Bandbox; Story of the House with the Green Blinds; Story of the Physician and the Saratoga Trunk; Story of the Young Man in Holy Orders; Story of the Young Man with the Cream Tarts; The Stymphalean Birds; The Sunningdale Mystery
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"August Heat" is a 1910 short story by W. F. Harvey, about two men, unknown to each other, whose look at the other's possible future suggests that one of them will be murdered and the other will be the murderer. It is often referred to as a ghost story (it appears in The Folio Society's Book of Ghost Stories, for example, and in Edward Gorey's ghost story collection The Haunted Look
Children's mystery short story collections (3 P) N. Nero Wolfe short story collections (14 P) S. Sherlock Holmes short story collections (1 C, 5 P)
These individuals have long been a staple of detective mystery crime fiction, particularly in detective novels and short stories. Much of early detective fiction was written during the "Golden Age of Detective Fiction" (1920s–1930s). These detectives include amateurs, private investigators and professional policemen. They are often ...
The book contains thirty-one stories by Asimov, including fifteen featuring his fictional club of mystery solvers, the Black Widowers, nine of his Union Club mysteries, and seven others (one featuring his science fictional detective Wendell Urth and two featuring his boy detective Larry). Most were reprinted from mystery magazines.
In the story, Lord Murchison recounts to his old friend a strange tale of a woman he had loved and intended to marry, but was now dead. She had always been very secretive and mysterious, and he one day followed her to see where she went, discovering her stealthily going to a boarding house. He suspected there was another man, and confronted her ...
"Strychnine in the Soup" is a short story by the British comic writer P. G. Wodehouse.A part of the Mr. Mulliner series, the story was first published in the US in The American Magazine in December 1931 (as "A Missing Mystery"), and in the UK in The Strand Magazine in March 1932. [1]