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Bank Shot, by Donald E. Westlake (Book Club Associates, 1972). From a charity shop in Victoria Centre, Nottingham. “May dropped backward into the sofa again; she always sat down as though she’d just had a stroke. ‘What’s the story?
Somebody Owes Me Money, by Donald E. Westlake (Hard Case Crime, 2008). From eBay. “I went up the stairs. Our six feet made complicated echoing dull rhythms on the rungs, and I thought of Robert Mitchum. What would Robert Mitchum do now, what
The Devil’s Home On Leave, by Derek Raymond (Serpent’s Tail, 1984) From eBay. After reading ‘I Was Dora Suarez’, I went and sought out the other books in Raymond’s Factory series, including this, the second. The back of the
William Peter Blatty on The Exorcist: From Novel to Film (Bantam 1974) From a charity shop, Nottingham. “It is Friday, July 13, 1973. As I write, Billy Friedkin, the director of The Exorcist, is returning from northern Iraq where he filmed at Nimru
Adam Link - Robot by Eando Binder (Paperback Library 1965) From a book shop on Charing Cross Road. “Adam Link - the first of the robot race - had photoelectric eyes, an iridium-sponge brain and the soul of a man!” Eando Binder was the pen
The Holmes-Dracula File, by Fred Saberhagen (Ace Books, 1978) From a second-hand book shop on Charing Cross Road, London. From the writings of the late John H. Watson, M.D. It is with emotions doubly strange that I at last take up my pen to write
Such Stuff As Dreams Are Made Of, by Robert Bloch (Ballantine Books, 1979) From a charity shop in Nottingham. From the introduction by Gahan Wilson: “The thing about Bloch’s stories is, literally, their knack of haunting the reader. They have a core
This Sweet Sickness, by Patricia Highsmith (Pan, 1960) From a charity shop in West Bridgford, Nottingham.
Start Screaming Murder, by Talmage Powell (Pocket Books Inc. 1962) From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Hot Rock, by Donald Westlake (Coronet 1972). From a charity shop in Sherwood, Nottingham. Kelp was veering all over the street, his attention distracted by his confusion over the window buttons. The left rear window rolled down, and he shouted Dortmu
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley (Vintage Crime/Black Lizard, 1988) From a charity shop in the Broadmarsh Centre, Nottingham. The Last Good Kiss is a late-Seventies slice of hard-boiled noir. Through a landscape of ramshackle roadside bars, seedy
Blue Sunshine, by Ken Johnson based on a screenplay by Jeff Lieberman (Sphere Books, 1977) From a charity shop in Nottingham. PSYCHOSIS… It started off as a great party - just eight of them in a ski-lodge in upstate New York. But then the last
The Desperate Hours, by Joseph Hayes (Perma Books, 1955). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, by Robert Louis Stevenson (New English Library, 1974) From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Panel from Marvel Graphic Novel: Emperor Doom - starring The Mighty Avengers, by David Michelinie and Bob Hall (Marvel Entertainment Group, 1987). From a jumble sale in Nottingham.
Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, with an Afterword by Harold Bloom (Signet, 1965) From a charity shop in Hockley, Nottingham. “Frankenstein’s monster, tempting his revengeful creator on through a world of ice, is another Emanation pursued
Neon Madman, by John Harvey (Sphere Books, 1977). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Cool Man, by W.R. Burnett (Fawcet, 1968). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The Golden Apples Of The Sun, by Ray Bradbury (Corgi, 1960). From a charity shop in Canterbury.
April Evil, by John D. MacDonald (Fawcett, 1956). From a second hand bookshop on Charing Cross Road, London. THE EXECUTIONER… The man was in his late twenties, slim and blond and erect. His suit sat well on him, expensive cloth hanging from good
Death of a Blue-Eyed Soul Brother, by B.B. Johnson (Paperback Library, 1970). From a charity shop in Canterbury, Kent.
No Need To Die, John Creasey writing as Gordon Ashe (Corgi, 1965). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Marvel Graphic Novel: Emperor Doom - starring The Mighty Avengers, by David Michelinie and Bob Hall (Marvel Entertainment Group, 1987). From a jumble sale in Nottingham.
Climb A Broken Ladder, by Robert Novak (Digit Books, 1956). From a charity shop in Nottingham. It had been a woman who put John Zerzanek where he was - down among the drunks on Skid Row. They didn’t even know his real name, just called him Bohunk,
Tabasco, by John B. Thompson (Beacon, 1959). From a charity shop in Nottingham. some SENORITAS are spicier than TABASCO Mexico is famed for Tabasco, the hot sauce - and for girls equally torrid. Yet his sweetheart in the States pushed Dan right into
Die Like A Dog, by Brett Halliday (Consul, 1963). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
The New Adventures of Frankenstein No.4: Frankenstein Meets Dracula, by Donald F. Glut (NEL, 1977) From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. Out of the smouldering ruins of a castle deep in the heart of Crovakia arise the battered forms of Capta
Book Of The Werewolf, edited by Brian J. Frost (Sphere Books, 1973). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham.
The Keep, by F. Paul Wilson (NEL, 1983). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. ‘Request immediate relocation. Something is murdering my men.’ The message, sent by Captain Klaus Woermann to German Army High Command. The location:
Something Wicked This Way Comes, by Ray Bradbury (Corgi, 1963). From a charity shop in Canterbury.
One Lonely Night, by Mickey Spillane (Corgi, 1965). From a charity shop in Nottingham. MY NAME’S MIKE HAMMER I’m a private investigator, with a licence to kill; which is why they can’t touch me, even though the judge says I’m
The Deep, by Mickey Spillane (Corgi, 1965). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Recoil, by Jim Thompson (Corgi, 1988) From a charity shop in Hounslow, London. ’Jim Thompson was the king…Thompson’s vision makes him like nobody else. His is a world peopled with psychopathic killers, expensive sluts, crooked cops,
Nighthunter 1: The Stalking, by Robert Faulcon (Arrow Books, 1983). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. He had been a quiet family man - devoted to his wife and children, happy in his home, happy in his work. It took just thirty minutes
The Succubus, by Kenneth Rayner Johnson (NEL, 1979). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham.
The Spirit, by Thomas Page (Hamlyn, 1981). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. It’s the stuff of nightmares and legends. It has many names: Bigfoot…Yeti…Sasquatch. But whatever it is, it’s out there in the woods,
Legion, by William Peter Blatty (Fontana, 1984). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. ‘CALL ME LEGION, FOR WE ARE MANY.’ Eleven years ago The Gemini Killer finished with his trail of death, leaving twenty-six mutilated bodies,
Devil’s Coach-Horse, by Richard Lewis (Hamlyn, 1979). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. It begins when a small charter plane crashes into the Alps. All the passengers are killed - a party of international scientists starting a
The Surrogate, by Nick Sharman (NEL, 1981). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. The old man was dying. Shivering, rug-wrapped, his body wasted, the limbs already skeletal. His room was filled with the sweetly nauseating smell of decay.
The Pariah, by Graham Masterton (Star, 1983). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. “I don’t know when I fell asleep, but I was awakened by the sudden dimming of my beside lamp. ‘John,’ whispered a voice. There was
Mantis, by K.W.Jeter, (Tom Doherty Associates, Inc, 1987). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. Except in times of greatest need, the female praying mantis does not destroy her mate. Rae has needs, hungers that cannot easily be satisfied.
Death Bite, by Michael Maryk and Brent Monahan (Granada, 1979). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. In New Guinea they found the Door of Hell. And they brought back the Taipan. A giant snake that exists only to kill. Its bite means pain-wr
The Totem, by David Morrell (Pan, 1979) From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. A young hitch-hiker was the first victim. Apparently killed by a hit-and-run driver - except for the unexplained claw scars… The coroner in the small town
Doomflight, by Guy N. Smith (Hamlyn, 1981). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham.
Locusts, by Guy N. Smith (Hamlyn, 1979). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. “The locusts moved - short hops that brought them nearer. And nearer. Only feet away. Thousands of them. Millions. All leering. There was no escape for
Bats Out Of Hell, by Guy N. Smith (NEL, 1978). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham.
Dome, by Lawrence Huff (NEL, 1980). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. THERE IS ABSOLUTELY NO DANGER…NO DANGER…NO DANGER…NO DANGER…NO DA… The mighty breeder reactor sat like a squat giant on the red skyli
The Mephisto Waltz, by Fred Mustard Stewart (Corgi, 1975). From Oxfam in Nottingham. There was something odd, something menacing about Duncan Ely and his raven-haired daughter, Roxanne. He’d been one of the greatest pianists the world had ever known
The Underpeople, by Cordwainer Smith (Pyramid, 1968). From Oxfam in Nottingham. DOWNDEEP - in the forgotten corridors and caverns under the glittering, crowded surface of Old Earth - live the Underpeople. Mutated from animal stock, they are man’s
The Unholy, by John Halkin (Hamlyn, 1982). From a charity shop on Mansfield Road, Nottingham. Once in a millenium a terrifying force is unleashed… The Unholy Just a shrivelled arm - a harmless old relic hidden away in a cave by superstitious peasa
Farewell, My Lovely, by Raymond Chandler (The World Publishing Company, 1946). From a charity shop in Canterbury.
In A Lonely Place, by Dorothy B. Hughes (Bantam, 1979). From a charity shop in Canterbury.
The Manitou, by Graham Masterton (Star, 1979) From a charity shop in Nottingham.
And The Devil Will Drag You Under, by Jack L. Chalker (Ballantine Books, 1979). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Stanley Kubrick’s Clockwork Orange. Illustrated Screenplay based on the novel by Anthony Burgess (Polaris, 1972). From a charity shop in Arnold. May 22, 1972 “I have always wondered if there might be a more meaningful way to present a book about
Playback, by Raymond Chandler (Hamish Hamilton, 1958). From a charity shop in Nottingham. She was quite a doll. She wore a white belted raincoat, no hat, a well-cherished head of platinum hair, bootees to match the raincoat, a folding plastic umbrella,
Love’s Lonely Counterfeit, by James M. Cain (Corgi, 1966). From a charity shop in Nottingham.
Cotton Comes To Harlem, by Chester Himes (Panther, 1969). From a charity shop in Canterbury. ‘Like a flick-knife. It is tough, weird, vicious, and quite remarkably un-put-downable…“Cotton” has a nightmarish quality, spiced with
Vampire’s Honeymoon, by Cornell Woolrich (Carroll and Graf, 1985). From a second-hand book shop on Charing Cross Rd. London.
The Tomb, by F. Paul Wilson (NEL, 1985). From a charity shop in Nottingham.