-
Recent Posts
- HAPPY BIRTHDAY, TURK! (1986) by Jakob Arjouni
- St. Ives (1976) – Tuesday’s Forgotten Film
- FUZZ (1968) by Ed McBain
- Farewell to Bryan Forbes
- MEMOS FROM PURGATORY (1961) by Harlan Ellison
- Ragu in The Smoke
- PROOF OF GUILT (1973) by Bill Pronzini
- Les Seins de glace (1974) – Tuesday’s Forgotten Film
- SOMEONE IS BLEEDING (1953) by Richard Matheson
- The Age of Revolution
== Currently off the shelf ==

Twitter Updates
- HAPPY BIRTHDAY, TURK! (1986) by Jakob Arjouni wp.me/p1jdW6-3u4 1 day ago
- St. Ives (1976) - Tuesday's Forgotten Film wp.me/p1jdW6-31E 4 days ago
- FUZZ (1968) by Ed McBain wp.me/p1jdW6-3hm 1 week ago
- Farewell to Bryan Forbes wp.me/p1jdW6-3Ks 2 weeks ago
Categories
Archives
Top Posts & Pages
Badge of honour
Blogroll
- Adventures in Primetime
- Aficionado
- Another Old Movie Blog
- At the Scene of the Crime
- At the Villa Rose
- Battered, Tattered, Yellowed, & Creased
- Beneath the Stains of Time (aka Detection by Moonlight)
- Chess, Comics, Crosswords, Books, Music, Cinema
- Classic Mysteries
- Confessions of a Mystery Novelist….
- Death Can Read
- Detectives Beyond Borders
- Do You Write Under Your Own Name
- Existential Ennui
- Films on the Box
- In Search of the Classic Mystery Novel
- In so many words …
- La morte sa leggere
- Mike Ripley's getting away with murder
- Mrs. Peabody Investigates
- My Reader's Block
- Mystery File
- Noir of the Week
- pattinase
- Postmodern Mystery
- Pretty Sinister Books
- Riding the High Country
- Shots
- Sweet Freedom
- The Passing Tramp
- The Rap Sheet
- The Stalking Moon
- They Don't Make 'Em Like They Used To
- Traditional Mysteries
Category Archives: Stuart Palmer
MURDER ON THE BLACKBOARD (1932) by Stuart Palmer
This book features one of the first, and funniest, examples of that mystery mainstay, the spinster sleuth. From Mary Roberts Rinehart’s plucky one-off heroines to the more professional investigating of Agatha Christie’s Jane Marple and Patricia Wentworth’s Maud Silver (both first … Continue reading
Posthumous collaborations: The April Robin Murders case
The recent BBC TV adaptation of Dickens’ The Mystery of Edwin Drood, that classic crime novel left unfinished at the time of the author’s death in 1870, got me thinking about ‘enforced collaborations’ where works were completed post-mortem by other … Continue reading
