"Harry's back! That's right, Harry Monday, that Sam Spade wannabe in the trench coat and gumshoes, is hot and on his latest case. Does he know what he's doing? Who knows? Is he over his head? Of course. Especially when he finds three characters murdered at the Restful Glen Psychiatric Annex. Only after he arrives does he find out that all the inmates have multiple personalities. And the three murder victims are all the same guy! Who killed Jeffrey Stadtlander? Was it the congressman who, in a crisis, becomes Edgar Allan Poe? Or maybe it was the schoolteacher who runs hot and cold? Or what about the mailman who has more personalities than he ever had on his route? "Clues are falling like cigarettes in the boys' bathroom," he says as he soon finds himself committed—and not just to the case. This wise-cracking whodunit will have you guessing until the final red herring—or perhaps Harry's goose—is cooked." -- Publisher's website
Edgar Allan Poe's The Murders in the Rue Morgue represents the beginning of crime fiction. The mystery was first published in Graham's Magazine in 1841 and has been recognized as the first detective story.
“Will keep readers on edge from start to finish.” —Kirkus Reviews Tell the truth. Or face the consequences. Clue meets Riverdale in this page-turning thriller that exposes the lies five teens tell about a deadly night one year ago.
By the end of this mystery series, you'll never think of good girls the same way again... Pip is about to head to college, but she is still haunted by the way her last investigation ended.
Hurston had run into Langston Hughes in New Orleans and the two young writers, eager for experience, had taken a leisurely road trip back to New York. “She had her own car,” Hughes later wrote in The Big Sea, ...
... and condescending. “Zanktion is the third to die, isn't he? Princess Syran's brother also died when he went to war alongside Thiven. Then there was that one wizard. I can't remember his name, but I heard that Thiven killed him himself ...
Geoffrey Michael Stephenson. any way , ' cos I mean , a murder's done and finished with ; but with kiddies they're ... you can do . ( b ) Well , everyone's got a right to live - as well as they have . 15. ( a ) There's nothing worse than ...
Karen Littles desire for more of God led to these events.
Three book in the Det.
... bad enough—but darling—oh, I feel so scared and so upset.” She sat, almost collapsed into a chair, and Barbara hastened to the small wall cupboard. “You shouldn't let it get you like that, Hester,” she said. “You'd better have a spot of ...
Jenna Cooper was only a few days old when her father was murdered and her family was shattered.