Otto Penzler Books In Order

Vampire Archives Books In Publication Order

  1. Bloodsuckers (2009)
  2. Fangs (2009)
  3. Coffins (2010)

Non-Fiction Books In Publication Order

  1. Detectionary (1971)
  2. Encyclopedia of Mystery and Detection (With: Chris Steinbrunner) (1976)
  3. Hang Gliding (1976)
  4. Hunting the Killer Shark (1976)
  5. Daredevils on Wheels (1976)
  6. This Prize is Dangerous (1985)
  7. 101 Greatest Films of Mystery and Suspense (2000)

Duncan Maclain Mystery Books In Publication Order

  1. The Last Express (By:) (1937)
  2. Odor of Violets / Eyes in the Night (With: ) (1941)
  3. Blind Man’s Bluff / Blind Date with Death (By:) (1943)
  4. Death Knell (By:) (1945)
  5. Make Mine Maclain (By:) (1947)
  6. The Murderer Who Wanted More (By:) (1951)
  7. You Die Today ! / You Diet Today! (By:) (1952)
  8. Blind Allies (By:) (1954)
  9. Reservations for Death (By:) (1957)
  10. Clear and Present Danger (By:) (1958)
  11. The Aluminum Turtle / The Spear Gun Murders (By:) (1960)
  12. Frankincense and Murder (By:) (1961)

Anthologies In Publication Order

  1. Whodunit? Houdini? (1976)
  2. The Private Lives of Private Eyes, Spies, Crimefighters & Other Good Guys (1977)
  3. The Great Detectives (1978)
  4. The Crown Crime Companion (1995)
  5. The Best American Mystery Stories 1997 (1997)
  6. The 50 Greatest Mysteries of All Time (1998)
  7. Murder for Revenge (1998)
  8. The Greatest Mysteries of All Time (1998)
  9. The Case of the Scottish Tragedy (1998)
  10. The Best American Mystery Stories 1998 (1998)
  11. Murder and Obsession (1999)
  12. The Best American Mystery Stories 1999 (1999)
  13. Criminal Records (2000)
  14. The Best American Mystery Stories of the Century (2000)
  15. The Best American Mystery Stories 2000 (2000)
  16. Murderers’ Row (2001)
  17. The Best American Mystery Stories 2001 (2001)
  18. Murder on the Ropes (2001)
  19. Murder Is My Racquet (2002)
  20. The Mighty Johns and Other Stories (2002)
  21. Sudden Death (2002)
  22. The Best American Mystery Stories 2002 (2002)
  23. The Best American Mystery Stories 3 (2002)
  24. One Clue Beyond (2003)
  25. Best American Crime Writing (2003)
  26. Murder at the Foul Line (2003)
  27. The Best American Mystery Stories (2003)
  28. The Best American Mystery Stories 2003 (2003)
  29. The Best American Mystery Stories 2004 (2004)
  30. Dangerous Women (2005)
  31. The Best American Crime Writing 2005 (2005)
  32. The Best American Mystery Stories 2005 (2005)
  33. Uncertain Endings (2006)
  34. Murder at the Racetrack (2006)
  35. Murder in the Rough (2006)
  36. The Best American Mystery Stories 2006 (2006)
  37. Pulp Fiction: The Crimefighters (2006)
  38. Pulp Fiction – The Villains (2007)
  39. Dead Man’s Hand (2007)
  40. The Best American Crime Reporting 2007 (2007)
  41. The Best American Mystery Stories 2007 (2007)
  42. The Black Lizard Big Book of Pulps (2007)
  43. The Vicious Circle (2007)
  44. Best American Mystery Stories 2007 (2008)
  45. Pulp Fiction – The Dames (2008)
  46. The Best American Mystery Stories 2008 (2008)
  47. Bloodsuckers (2009)
  48. The Vampire Archives (2009)
  49. The Lineup (2009)
  50. Fangs (2009)
  51. Black Noir (2009)
  52. Murder for Love (2009)
  53. The Best American Mystery Stories 2009 (2009)
  54. Agents of Treachery (2010)
  55. The Black Lizard Big Book of Black Mask Stories (2010)
  56. The Best American Mystery Stories 2010 (2010)
  57. The Best American Noir of the Century (2010)
  58. Christmas at The Mysterious Bookshop (2010)
  59. The Greatest Russian Stories of Crime and Suspense (2010)
  60. The Best American Mystery Stories 2011 (2011)
  61. The Big Book of Adventure Stories (2011)
  62. Zombies! Zombies! Zombies! (2011)
  63. Zombies: A Compendium (2011)
  64. The Big Book of Ghost Stories (2012)
  65. Mark Twain’s Medieval Romance (2012)
  66. In Pursuit of Spenser: Mystery Writers on Robert B. Parker and the Creation of an American Hero (2012)
  67. The Best American Mystery Stories 2012 (2012)
  68. Jack the Ripper (2012)
  69. The Best American Mystery Stories 2013 (2013)
  70. The Best of the Best American Mystery Stories (2013)
  71. Kwik Krimes (2013)
  72. The Big Book of Christmas Mysteries (2013)
  73. The Best American Mystery Stories of the Nineteenth Century (2014)
  74. The Best American Mystery Stories 2014 (2014)
  75. The Black Lizard Big Book of Locked-Room Mysteries (2014)
  76. Sherlock (2015)
  77. The Best American Mystery Stories 2015 (2015)
  78. The Big Book of Sherlock Holmes Stories (2015)
  79. The Best American Mystery Stories 2016 (2016)
  80. The Big Book of Jack the Ripper (2016)
  81. Silent Night, Deadly Night (2016)
  82. The Best American Mystery Stories 2017 (2017)
  83. The Big Book of Rogues and Villains (2017)
  84. Bibliomysteries (2018)
  85. The Best American Mystery Stories 2018 (2018)
  86. Classic American Crime Fiction of the 1920s (2018)
  87. The Big Book of Female Detectives (2018)
  88. Death Sentences (2019)
  89. The Best American Mystery Stories 2019 (2019)
  90. The Big Book of Reel Murders (2019)
  91. The Best American Mystery Stories 2020 (2020)
  92. The Big Book of Espionage (2020)
  93. Golden Age Detective Stories (2021)
  94. The Big Book of Victorian Mysteries (2021)

Vampire Archives Book Covers

Non-Fiction Book Covers

Duncan Maclain Mystery Book Covers

Anthologies Book Covers

Otto Penzler Books Overview

Coffins

The Vampire Archives is the biggest, hungriest, undeadliest collection of vampire stories, as well as the most comprehensive bibliography of vampire fiction ever assembled. Dark, stormy, and delicious, once it sinks its teeth into you there’s no escape. Vampires! Whether imagined by Bram Stoker or Anne Rice, they are part of the human lexicon and as old as blood itself. They are your neighbors, your friends, and they are always lurking. Now Otto Penzler editor of the bestselling Black Lizard Big Book of Pulps has compiled the darkest, the scariest, and by far the most evil collection of vampire stories ever. With over eighty stories, including the works of Stephen King and D. H. Lawrence, alongside Lord Byron and Tanith Lee, not to mention Edgar Allan Poe and Harlan Ellison, The Vampire Archives will drive a stake through the heart of any other collection out there. Other contributors include: Arthur Conan Doyle Ray Bradbury Ambrose Bierce H. P. Lovecraft Harlan Ellison Roger Zelazny Robert Bloch Clive Barker

The Crown Crime Companion

The Crown Crime CompanionThe Top 100 Mystery Novels Of All TimeSelected by theMystery Writers Of AmericaAnnotated by 0tto Penzler and Compiled by Mickey FriedmanFor The Crown Crime Companion, the Mystery Writers of America have compiled a list of the best 100 mystery novels of all time, as well as a list of favorites in ten categories. Fully annotated and reviewed by Otto Penzler, this list of the top 100 mysteries will be a valuable resource to fans, introducing them to new novels and reminding them about books by favorite writers they may have missed. Each of the ten category lists is introduced by a master of that category:Classics:Suspense:Hardboiled/Private Eye:Police Procedural:Espionage/Thriller:Criminal:Cozy/Traditional:Historical:Humorous:Legal/Courtroom:H.R.F. KeatingMary Higgins ClarkSue GraftonJoseph WambaughJohn GardnerRichard CondonMargaret MaronPeter LoveseyGregory McdonaldScott Turow

The 50 Greatest Mysteries of All Time

This winner of the AudioFile Earphone Award includes: ‘The Invisible Man’ by G. K. Chesterton, ”Haircut’ by Ring Lardner, ‘Iris’ by Stephen Greenleaf, ‘The Nine Mile Walk’ by Harry Kemelman, ‘The Red Headed League’ by Arthur Conan Doyle, ‘ ‘The New Girl Friend’ by Ruth Rendell, ‘The Three Strangers’ by Thomas Hardy, ‘A Retrieved Reformation’ by O. Henry, ‘The Leopard Man’s Story’ by Jack London, ‘The Hand of Carlos’ by Charles McCarry, ‘The Case of the Missing Patriarch’ by Logan Clendening, ‘The Hands of Mr. Ottermole’ by Thomas Burke, ‘A New Leaf’ by Jack Ritchie, ‘Gentlemen and Players’ by E. W. Hornung, ‘The Unique Hamlet’ by Vincent Starrett, ‘The Infallible Godahl’ by F. I. Anderson, and ‘Soft Monkey,’ written and read by Harlan Ellison.

Murder for Revenge

A high school wallflower cooks up justice la carte at her 20th reunion…
A submissive wife sails her domineering husband straight to hell…
A man disposes of his enemy in a murder only a writer could commit. This irresistible collection of original stories was born of a deliciously wicked idea: ask twelve of America’s best writers to explore a single subject people willing, often gleefully so, to kill for revenge. The result is a star studded gathering of fiction’s finest, and an infinitely satisfying banquet of…
Murder for Revenge. In Lawrence Block’s chilling contribution, a serial killer transforms one victim’s brother into his greatest defender to his eternal regret! Revenge more immediate sizzles in Mary Higgins Clark’s ‘Power Play,’ as a dashing ex president and his congresswoman wife outwit terrorists hunting bigger game. Phillip Margolin’s career criminal has an alibi to die for which becomes a nail in the coffin of self defense. Joyce Carol Oates administers revenge most satisfying in ‘Murder Two’ as a brilliant lawyer defends her first criminal client her worst enemy’s son. And in Peter Straub’s ‘Mr. Clubb and Mr. Cuff,’ a betrayed husband discovers that if you have to ask the price of revenge, you can’t afford to pay for it. Here is delicious retribution in these and seven more superb, all new stories by Thomas H. Cook, Vicki Hendricks, Joan Hess, Judith Kelman, Eric Lustbader, David Morrell, and Shel Silverstein: America’s favorite writers gathered together in one unforgettable volume a wickedly entertaining exploration of sweet, cold blooded revenge. Otto Penzler is the owner of The Mysterious Bookshops in New York City, Los Angeles, and London. The founder of The Mysterious Press and Otto Penzler Books, he is also the editor of the acclaimed collection Murder for Love. He received an Edgar Award for the Encyclopedia of Mystery and Detection, and was honored by the Mystery Writers of America in 1994 with the Ellery Queen Award for his contributions in the publishing field. He lives in New York City.

The Greatest Mysteries of All Time

Breathtaking suspense, cold blooded crime and challenging twists of plot make this collection a chilling audio experience. Features the finest short story mystery fiction by the most acclaimed writers, past and present. 4 cassettes.

The Best American Mystery Stories 1998

Bestselling writers such as Mary Higgins Clark, Walter Mosley, Lawrence Block, Jay McInerney, and Donald E. Westlake stand alongside an impressive array of new talent. As guest editor Sue Grafton writes in her Introduction, ‘Nowhere is iniquity, wrongdoing, and reparation more satisfying to behold than in the well crafted yarns spun by the writers represented here’.

Murder and Obsession

From lethal spikes to fatal kisses, from mad dogs to battle crazed Englishmen, here indeed is Murder and Obsession, a star studded collection of previously unpublished short mysteries. In the wickedly entertaining tradition of his acclaimed collections Murder for Love and Murder for Revenge, award winning editor Otto Penzler has once again gathered the best of the best, fifteen bestselling authors who dare to explore a deliciously chilling subject: obsession at its most insidious. Her toenails were bloodred, her lips were blue in Edna Buchanan’s ‘The Red Shoes,’ a riveting tale that takes us into the life of an alcoholic turned foot fetishist who steps into the middle of a murder. What happens when a hard nosed insurance investigator lights up a joint and sniffs out a case of arson? It’s a tale that only Elmore Leonard could tell, in ‘Sparks.’ Then there’s ‘Slow Burn,’ Eric Van Lustbader’s gripping story of a beautiful detective torn among obsessions a past injustice, a consuming passion, and a savage crime that links them both. Elizabeth George reaches into English history in ‘I, Richard,’ as an academic obsessed by a priceless artifact plots a deadly course of seduction only to discover that fate is the most quixotic mistress of all. But ‘Barking at Butterflies’ is a story straight out of today’s headlines: Ed McBain’s tale of a man who goes barking mad when a yappy Maltese takes over his life. Can the devil make you do it? Joyce Carol Oates has the answer as she plumbs the darkest recesses of possession in ‘The Vampire.’A paranoid cop smokes out an unseen perpetrator…
a minor annoyance mushrooms into a major crime…
an aging voyeur is lured into self destruction by a teenage temptress seen through a crack in the wall…
It’s a devil’s brew of Murder and Obsession in nine more mesmerizing stories by Kent Anderson, Amanda Cross, James Crumley, Philip Friedman, James W. Hall, Dennis Lehane, Michael Malone, Anne Perry, and Shel Silverstein, America’s favorite writers exploring the depths of obsession for the height of bone chilling fun.

The Best American Mystery Stories 1999

In its brief existence, THE BEST AMERICAN MYSTERY STORIES has established itself as a peerless suspense anthology. Compiled by the best selling mystery novelist Ed McBain, this year’s edition boasts nineteen outstanding tales by such masters as John Updike, Lawrence Block, Jeffery Deaver, and Joyce Carol Oates as well as stories by rising stars such as Edgar Award winners Tom Franklin and Thomas H. Cook. The 1999 volume is a spectacular showcase for the high quality and broad diversity of the year’s finest suspense, crime, and mystery writing. ‘Keller’s Last Refuge’ by Lawrence Block, ‘Safe’ by Gary A. Braunbeck, ‘Fatherhood’ by Thomas H. Cook, ‘Wrong Time, Wrong Place’ by Jeffery Deaver, ‘Netmail’ by Brendan DuBois, ‘Redneck’ by Loren D. Estleman, ‘And Maybe the Horse Will Learn to Sing’ by Gregory Fallis, ‘Poachers’ by Tom Franklin, ‘Hitting Rufus’ by Victor Gischler, ‘Out There in the Darkness’ by Ed Gorman, ‘Survival’ by Joseph Hansen, ‘A Death on the Ho Chi Minh Trail’ by David K. Harford, ‘An Innocent Bystander’ by Gary Krist, ‘The Jailhouse Lawyer’ by Phillip M. Margolin, ‘Secret, Silent’ by Joyce Carol Oates, ‘In Flanders Fields’ by Peter Robinson, ‘Dry Whiskey’ by David B. Silva, ‘Sacrifice’ by L. L. Thrasher, ‘Bech Noir’ by John Updike

The Best American Mystery Stories of the Century

In The Best American Mystery Stories of the Century, best selling author Tony Hillerman and mystery expert Otto Penzler present an unparalleled treasury of American suspense fiction that every fan will cherish. Offering the finest examples from all reaches of the genre, this collection charts the mystery’s eminent history from the turn of the century puzzles of Futrelle, to the seminal pulp fiction of Hammett and Chandler, to the mystery story’s rise to legitimacy in the popular mind, a trend that has benefited masterly writers like Westlake, Hunter, and Grafton. Nowhere else can readers find a more thorough, more engaging, more essential distillation of American crime fiction. Penzler, BEST AMERICAN MYSTERY STORIES series editor, and Hillerman, whose Leaphorn/Chee novels have won him multiple Edgar Awards and millions of devotees, winnowed this select group out of a thousand stories, drawing on sources as diverse as ELLERY QUEEN’S MYSTERY MAGAZINE and ESQUIRE, COLLIER’S and THE NEW YORKER. Giants of the genre abound Raymond Chandler, Stephen King, Dashiell Hammett, Lawrence Block, Ellery Queen, Sara Paretsky, and others but the editors also unearthed gems by luminaries rarely found in suspense anthologies: William Faulkner, John Steinbeck, Damon Runyon, Harlan Ellison, James Thurber, and Joyce Carol Oates. Mystery buffs and newcomers alike will delight in the thrilling stories and top notch writing of a hundred years’ worth of the finest suspense, crime, and mystery writing.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2000

After just three years, THE BEST AMERICAN MYSTERY STORIES series is already a great success, earning raves from such diverse sources as Joyce Carol Oates, ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY, and ELLERY QUEEN’S MYSTERY MAGAZINE. Little wonder, given the power of the Best American brand, the talent of the series editor, Otto Penzler, and the high profile of the guest editors. Now, with the legendary mystery writer Donald E. Westlake as guest editor, the 2000 edition is sure to boost the series’ popularity even more. From fty exceptional stories chosen by Penzler, Westlake has selected the twenty best, including stories by Tom Franklin, Jeffery Deaver, Shel Silverstein, and Dennis Lehane, for a collection that will delight mystery buffs and casual readers alike.

Murderers’ Row

Charlie is at it againand this time he’s headed to the South! Catch him if you can as he checks out the geography of the southern United States and learns about the cities, sites, products, and history that define the South. Using the search and find format, Chuck Nitzberg has hidden Charlie in a series of wacky and colorful state maps. Among each state’s major cities, monuments, natural resources, and historical figures, the careful reader can find Charlie before he races off to the next location. This unique combination of I Spy, geography lesson, map reading, and trivia is jam packed with information. Where will Charlie go next?States included: Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Virginia West Virginia

The Best American Mystery Stories 2001

Since its inception in 1915, the Best American series has become the premier annual showcase for the country’s finest short fiction and nonfiction. For each volume, a series editor reads hundreds of pieces from dozens of periodicals, then selects between fifty and a hundred outstanding works. That selection is pared down to the twenty or so very best pieces by a guest editor who is widely recognized as a leading writer in his or her field. This unique system has helped make the Best American series the most respected and most popular of its kind. The Best American Mystery Stories 2001 will thrill fans of all reaches of the genre. The legendary mystery writer Lawrence Block offers chilling tales from best selling writers as well as talented up and comers. Ranging from traditional detective cases to psychological studies to atmospheric scene setters, these stories illustrate the variety and broad range of styles, plots, and characters Block admires in the genre. With Block as guest editor and a stellar roster of suspense veterans and rising stars, the 2001 edition will delight mystery afcionados and all lovers of great fiction.

Murder on the Ropes

Murder on the Ropes is the second installment of New Millenium’s Sports Mysteries anthology. This second round, set within the arena of the world of boxing, is an involving collection from some of the most interesting voices of mystery. See how, set within a common context, each author takes the reader in so many interesting directions. Each mystery story stands on its own as a wonderful read, but all taken together brings a new appreciation to the craft of these top authors. Contributors include Lawrence Block, James Grady, Joyce Carol Oates, Mike Lupica, Doug Alleyn, Andrew Bergman, Thomas H. Cook, Brenda DuBois, Loren D. Estleman, Edward D. Hoch, Clark Howard, Stuart M. Kaminsky, John Shannon, and F. X. Toole.

Murder Is My Racquet

Murder Is My Racquet is the most thrilling way to read about tennis, murder and intrigue. This collection of stories by famous mystery writers, including Ridley Pearson and Lawrence Block, deal with the prestige of the high stakes race to become one of the few international tennis stars, the promotional opportunities involved, the elimination of tournament competition, and the strategy of tennis in general. Viewed as an elite game since its beginnings, tennis is the perfect sport for one on one play and murder! Authors also include Kinky Friedman, John Harvey, James W. Hall, Lisa Scottoline and many more!

The Mighty Johns and Other Stories

Additional stories include: The Ehrengraf Reverse by Lawrence Block Semi Pro by James Crumley A Sunday in January by Brendan DuBois Whatever it Takes to Win by Tim Green Good Seats by Colin Harrison Gone Down to Corpus by Dennis Lehane No Thing by Mike Lupica The Empire Strikes Back by Brad Meltzer The Arcane Receiver by Carol O’Connell The End of Innocence by Anne Perry Hollywood Spring and Axle by Gary Phillips Gone to the Dawgs by Peter Robinson Rumors of Gravity by John Westermann These tales of football and in one case European football, rugby include macabre deaths, ultimate suspense, theft, drugs, big money and football. Tales of Super Bowl Sunday, NFL teams, has been players, great fans, and final plays are a collection like no other. All the best writers in one book, edited by the famous Otto Penzler, founder of The Mysterious Press.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2002

Bestselling novelist James Ellroy introduces this year’s collection of the finest mystery writing. Many of the contributors herein are novelists themselves, displaying their talents in short story form: Michael Connelly tells a fatal tale of revenge in ‘Two Bagger.’ In Joe Gores’s ‘Inscrutable,’ the Feds beat the Mafia at their own game. Stuart Kaminsky demonstrates how horribly wrong things go when a robber gets cocky in ‘Sometimes Something Goes Wrong.’ And Robert B. Parker shows just how important Jackie Robinson’s fans can be in ‘Harlem Nocturne.’ Also featured are veterans of the short story form and favorites of this series. Brendan DuBois’s ‘A Family Game’ introduces a former Mafia family trying to lead a normal life in the Witness Protection Program. Joyce Carol Oates tells a chilling tale of a crush taken too far in ‘The High School Sweetheart.’ A tenant sneaks into the murder crime scene next door in Michael Downs’s ‘Man Kills Wife, Two Dogs.’ Readers will be captivated by all the stories herein, whether by famed novelists or masters of the short story.

Best American Crime Writing

This year’s worth of the most powerful, the most startling, the smartest and most astute, in short, the best crime journalism. Scouring hundreds of publications, Otto Penzler and Thomas H. Cook have created a remarkable compilation containing the best examples of the most current and vibrant of our literary traditions: crime reporting. Included in this volume are Maximillian Potter s The Body Farm from GQ, a portrait of Murray Marks, who collects dead bodies and strews them around two acres of the University of Tennessee campus to study their decomposition in order to help solve crime; Jay Kirk s My Undertaker, My Pimp, from Harper s, in which Mack Moore and his wife, Angel, switch from run ning crooked funeral parlors to establishing a brothel; Skip Hollandsworth s The Day Treva Throneberry Disappeared from Texas Monthly, about the sudden disappearence of a teenager and the strange place she turned up; Lawrence Wright s The Counterterrorist from The New Yorker, the story of John O Neill, the FBI agent who tracked Osama bin Laden for a decade until he was killed when the World Trade Center collapsed. Intriguing, entertaining, and compelling reading, Best American Crime Writing has established itself as a much anticipated annual.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2003

This seventh installment of the premier mystery anthology boasts pulse quickening stories from all reaches of the genre, selected by the world renowned mystery writer Michael Connelly. His choices include a Prohibition era tale of a scorned lover’s revenge, a Sherlock Holmes inspired mystery solved by an actor playing the famous detective onstage, stories of a woman’s near fatal search for self discovery, a bar owner’s gutsy attempt to outwit the mob, and a showdown between double crossing detectives, and a tale of murder by psychology. This year’s edition features mystery favorites Elmore Leonard, Walter Mosley, James Crumley, Joyce Carol Oates, and Brendan DuBois as well as talented up and comers, for a diverse collection sure to thrill all readers. Since its inception in 1915, the Best American series has become the premier annual showcase for the country’s finest short fiction and nonfiction. For each volume, a series editor reads pieces from hundreds of periodicals, then selects between fifty and a hundred outstanding works. That selection is pared down to twenty or so very best pieces by a guest editor who is widely recognized as a leading writer in his or her field. This unique system has helped make the Best American series the most respected and most popular of its kind. Edgar Award winner Michael Connelly has chosen a collection of stellar stories by the genre’s luminaries and by the most promising newer talents in the field. As usual, this year’s Best American Mystery Stories will delight readers with dramatic variety and unsurpassed quality. James CrumleyPete DexterBrendan DuBoisElmore LeonardWalter MosleyJoyce Carol Oates

The Best American Mystery Stories 2004

Since its inception in 1915, the Best American series has become the premier annual showcase for the country’s finest short fiction and nonfiction. For each volume, a series editor reads pieces from hundreds of periodicals, then selects between fifty and a hundred outstanding works. That selection is pared down to twenty or so very best pieces by a guest editor who is widely recognized as a leading writer in his or her field. This unique system has helped make the Best American series the most respected and most popular of its kind.
Assembled by best selling suspense author Nelson DeMille, The Best American Mystery Stories 2004 contains a spectacular array of stories by mystery veterans and talented newcomers. Follow a chain reaction that saves a woman s life, visit a house haunted by a husband s violent killing spree, enter the high stakes world of Las Vegas gambling, watch the line between reality and dream blur, travel with a bored salesman driven to crime, and much more. Encompassing all aspects of the genre, this year s selections are sure to quicken pulses, send chills down the spine, and keep readers continually guessing.

Dangerous Women

Prepare to meet the most seductively female and the most shockingly fatal of femmes fatales, brought to you by seventeen of today’s finest authors of mystery and suspense fiction. Award winning editor Otto Penzler presents a collection of short and sizzling masterpieces of kisses and kiss offs, gams and gats, published for the first time anywhere. In ‘Third Party,’ Jay McInerney takes you on a wild ride through the Paris night with a party girl built for speed and sin ‘Rendezvous,’ Nelson DeMille’s first short story in twenty five years, plunges you into a Vietnam jungle where the bloodiest scourge of this man’s army is no man at all back in the U.S.A. of ‘Louly and Pretty Boy,’ Elmore Leonard introduces a Depression era teenage gun moll who loves Pretty Boy Floyd more than she likes knocking off filling stations and Michael Connelly’s colorful and ironic ‘Cielo Azul’ shows how a nameless woman left dead on a Los Angeles hillside can be the most lethal prey of all. These and a bevy of other very bad girls cast their criminal spells through the powerful voices of Lorenzo Carcaterra, Joyce Carol Oates, John Connolly, Thomas H. Cook, Jeffery Deaver, J. A. Jance, Andrew Klavan, Laura Lippman, Ed McBain, Walter Mosley, Anne Perry, Ian Rankin, and S. J. Rozan in stories as irresistible as the antihero*ines that blaze through their pages.’I’m not usually given to superlatives, but Dangerous Women may be the best, most varied, and colorful mystery anthology of all time.’ Janet Evanovich’Otto Penzler knows more about crime fiction than most people know about anything, and proves it once more in this brilliant anthology.’ Robert B. Parker’Wow, what memorable dames! What terrific short stories! Dangerous Women is a winning collection.’ Susan Isaacs

The Best American Crime Writing 2005

The 2005 edition of The Best American Crime Writing offers the year’s most shocking, compelling, and gripping writing about real life crime, including Peter Landesman’s article about female sex slaves the most requested and widely read New York Times story of 2004, a piece from The New Yorker by Stephen J. Dubner the coauthor of Freakanomics about a high society silver thief, and an extraordinarily memorable ‘ode to bar fights’ written by Jonathan Miles for Men’s Journal after he punched an editor at a staff party. But this year’s edition includes a bonus an original essay by James Ellroy detailing his fascination with Joseph Wambaugh and how it fed his obsession with crime even to the point of selling his own blood to buy Wambaugh’s books. Smart, entertaining, and controversial, The Best American Crime Writing is an essential edition to any crime enthusiast’s bookshelf.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2005

The Best American series has been the premier annual showcase for the country’s finest short fiction and nonfiction since 1915. Each volume’s series editor selects notable works from hundreds of periodicals. A special guest editor, a leading writer in the field, then chooses the very best twenty or so pieces to publish. This unique system has made the Best American series the most respected and most popular of its kind.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2005 includes

Scott Turow Edward P. Jones Louise Erdrich Dennis Lehane Daniel Handler Laura Lippman George V. Higgins David Means Richard Burgin Scott Wolven Stuart M. Kaminsky and others

Joyce Carol Oates, guest editor, is a highly respected novelist, critic, playwright, poet, and short story writer. She is the author of numerous books, including the National Book Award winner Them and most recently the novel The Falls.

Uncertain Endings

The most intriguing riddle mysteries in literary history, including tales from Bradbury, Dahl, Huxley, O. Henry, and TwainTantalizing, as ingenious as they are devious, the classic stories in this continually arresting collection come with an irresistible challenge: At their end they leave it to you, the reader, to determine how they end. For ultimately it’s the reader who authors the fate of the brave youth as he contemplates which of the two doors in the king’s arena he will choose in Frank Stockton’s famous and unforgettable ‘The Lady, or the Tiger?’ And which of the two brothers in three time Edgar winner Stanley Ellin’s ‘Unreasonable Doubt’ shoots a bullet square in the middle of their rich uncle’s forehead? And just what not so sweet secret is the prim Miss Spence hiding behind her smile in Aldous Huxley’s deliciously enigmatic tale? You decide. In all, as in ‘The Moment of Decision’ a chilling tale that seals an escape artist inside an airless stone cell with a heavy wooden door, which may or may not open the moment of decision is yours.

Murder at the Racetrack

Lawrence Block, in Keller by a Nose,’ asks what obsession holds more hazards than betting on the ponies. The answer will surprise you…
Max Allan Collins’s ‘That Kind of Nag’ proves that it’s bad to play the wrong horse, but worse to pick the wrong woman…
‘The Great, the Good and the Not So Good’ by H.R.F. Keating warns against old English ladies at the racecourse…
Joyce Carol Oates shows how a young woman teams to trust a prize stallion more than her violent lover in ‘Meadowlands’…
and Scott Wolven’s ‘Pinwheel’ offers a Japanese lesson in flying horses and honor among thieves.’ BOOK JACKET.

Murder in the Rough

Lawrence Block, Simon Brett, Ken Bruen, Christopher Coake, Stephen Collins, Tom Franklin, Jonathan Gash, Steve Hamilton, H.R.F. Keating, Laura Lippman, Bradford Morrow, Ian Rankin, John Sandford, William G. Tapply, and John Westermann, along with introductory comments by Otto Penzler, deliver up an ace anthology of original short stories that mix murder and mystery on the fairway. This collection is sure to appeal to sports fans and those eager to read stories by the most celebrated authors in the mystery genre.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2006

‘ Most of these stories are portraits, in styles ranging from sly to harrowing, of how crimes occurred…
If you like all your characters living at the end of a story, this may not be the book for you.’ from the introduction by Scott Turow

Best selling author Scott Turow takes the helm for the tenth edition of this annual, featuring twenty one of the past year’s most distinguished tales of mystery, crime, and suspense.

Elmore Leonard tells the tale of a young woman who’s fled home with a convicted bank robber. Walter Mosley describes an over the hill private detective and his new client, a woman named Karma. C. J. Box explores the fate of two Czech immigrants stranded by the side of the road in Yellowstone Park. Ed McBain begins his story on role playing with the line ”Why don’t we kill somebody?’ she suggested.’ Wendy Hornsby tells of a wild motorcycle chase through the canyons outside Las Vegas. Laura Lippman describes the ‘Crack Cocaine Diet.’ And James Lee Burke writes of a young boy who may have been a close friend of Bugsy Siegel.

As Scott Turow notes in his introduction, these stories are ‘about crime its commission, its aftermath, its anxieties, its effect on character.’ The Best American Mystery Stories 2006 is a powerful collection for all readers who enjoy fiction that deals with the extremes of human passion and its dark consequences.

Pulp Fiction: The Crimefighters

Harlan Coben introduces a collection of the greatest of the great from the Golden Age of pulp fiction. Here are 14 classic tales of virtue versus villainy that will keep you riveted to your seat. Legendary writers you’ve already heard of like Dashiell Hammett, Erle Stanley Gardner, Cornell Woolrich and Raymond Chandler are here. Legendary writers that you should have heard of like Frederick Nebel, Paul Cain, Carroll John Daly, George Harman Coxe, Horace McCoy and Thomas Walsh are also where they should be with the greats. Tailor made for pulp novices and hard boiled fans with a soft spot for the masters, this collection shows that some writing has an edge that time just can’t dull.

Pulp Fiction – The Villains

Harlan Ellison introduces a collection of 16 taut and muscular tales starring some of fiction’s hardest boiled criminals, crooks, desperado’s and rogues. Anti heroes to a man, these are the guys who can be guaranteed to outwit the cops, make off with the dough and get the girl. Just don’t get in their way. Legendary writers you’ve already heard of like Dashiell Hammett, Erle Stanley Gardner, Cornell Woolrich and Raymond Chandler are here. Legendary writers that you should have heard of like Frederick Nebel, James M. Cain, Norbert Davis, Leslie Charteris, C. S. Montayne and Raoul Whitfield are also where they should be with the greats. Tailor made for pulp novices and hard boiled fans with a soft spot for the masters, this collection shows that some writing has an edge that time just can’t dull.

Dead Man’s Hand

If ever a subject begged to be associated with crime it is gambling, writes Otto Penzler in his introduction to this collection of short stories set at the poker table and beyond. In Walter Mosley’s Mister In Between, a bagman is sent to collect from a rigged poker game, but soon begins to wonder who the real mark is. In One Dollar Jackpot, Michael Connelly s detective Harry Bosch finds himself looking for tells when facing off against a professional poker player in the interrogation room. And a young woman learns how to bluff the hard way in Hardly Knew Her, by Laura Lippman. In these and others stories, aces of the mystery writing world including Joyce Carol Oates, Alexander McCall Smith, Jeffery Deaver, John Lescroart, and others combine to form a winning hand.

The Best American Crime Reporting 2007

Thieves, liars, killers, and conspirators it’s a criminal world out there, and someone has got to write about it. An eclectic collection of the year’s best reportage, The Best American Crime Reporting 2007 brings together the murderers and muscle men, the masterminds, and the mysteries and missteps that make for brilliant stories, told by the aces of the true crime genre. This latest addition to the highly acclaimed series features guest editor Linda Fairstein, the bestselling crime novelist and former chief prosecutor of the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office’s pioneering Special Victims’ Unit.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2007

The best selling author Carl Hiaasen takes the reins for the eleventh edition of this series, featuring twenty of the past year’s most distinguished tales of mystery, crime, and suspense. Laura Lippman introduces us to a suburban soccer mom who moonlights as a call girl and who has a fateful encounter with a former client at her son s soccer game. Ridley Pearson traces a famous author of horror tales who becomes trapped in a real one after his wife vanishes while jogging. Joyce Carol Oates travels to a New Jersey racetrack where the animals that break down are of the two legged type. Lawrence Block tells the story of Keller, a hitman for hire who happens to live in Greenwich Village, loves spicy food, and collects stamps as a hobby. And Scott Wolven plunges us into the world of an ex con who takes a job at a private and very illegal Nevada racetrack where each day millions are won and lost. Mostly lost. As Carl Hiaasen notes in his introduction, The stories in this collection would do honor to any anthology of short literature. More than transcending the genre of crime, they blow away its nebulous boundaries. The Best American Mystery Stories 2007 is a powerful collection certain to delight mystery aficionados and all lovers of great fiction.

The Vicious Circle

The mystery and crime fiction of the Algonquin Round Table. With the possible exception of the expatriate writers living in Paris in the 1920s, no single group of American literary figures has achieved as much fame or notoriety as the New York sophisticates who met to match wits and attempt to outshine each other as members of what came to be called the Algonquin Round Table. The humorists Robert Benchley and S. J. Perelman, playwrights Marc Connelly and George S. Kaufman, novelists Edna Ferber and Alexander Woollcott, and most famously, Dorothy Parker, were the literary luminaries who made up this group, and each one produced a piece or two of crime fiction at some point, which are collected for the first time in this anthology by acclaimed mystery editor Otto Penzler.

Best American Mystery Stories 2007

The best selling author Carl Hiaasen takes the reins for the eleventh edition of this series, featuring twenty of the past year’s most distinguished tales of mystery, crime, and suspense. Laura Lippman introduces us to a suburban soccer mom who moonlights as a call girl and who has a fateful encounter with a former client at her son s soccer game. Ridley Pearson traces a famous author of horror tales who becomes trapped in a real one after his wife vanishes while jogging. Joyce Carol Oates travels to a New Jersey racetrack where the animals that break down are of the two legged type. Lawrence Block tells the story of Keller, a hitman for hire who happens to live in Greenwich Village, loves spicy food, and collects stamps as a hobby. And Scott Wolven plunges us into the world of an ex con who takes a job at a private and very illegal Nevada racetrack where each day millions are won and lost. Mostly lost. As Carl Hiaasen notes in his introduction, The stories in this collection would do honor to any anthology of short literature. More than transcending the genre of crime, they blow away its nebulous boundaries. The Best American Mystery Stories 2007 is a powerful collection certain to delight mystery aficionados and all lovers of great fiction.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2008

A must read for anyone who cares about crime stories. BooklistThe award winning author and Emmy nominated television writer George Pelecanos serves as editor of the twelfth installment of this genre expanding anthology, featuring twenty of the past year’s most enthralling, suspenseful, and slyly illuminating mystery stories.A cut and dried case for a wily crime scene reconstructionist is turned on its head in Michael Connelly s Mulholland Dive. A terrible secret shared between two childhood friends resurfaces decades later as one of them lies on her deathbed in Alice Munro s masterful Child s Play. James Lee Burke tells the haunting tale of a Hurricane Katrina evacuee who unexpectedly finds comfort from an unimaginable loss in Mist. And in Holly Goddard Jones s Proof of God, a young man s car is repeatedly vandalized as proof that someone knows about the truths he d never willingly reveal. As Pelecanos notes in his introduction, the twenty original and unique voices in this collection pay homage to the genre s forebears by taking crime fiction into a thrilling new direction. But make no mistake, he says, we are all standing on the shoulders of writers who came before us and left an indelible mark on literature through craftsmanship, care, and the desire to leave something of worth behind.

The Vampire Archives

The Vampire Archives is the biggest, hungriest, undeadliest collection of vampire stories, as well as the most comprehensive bibliography of vampire fiction ever assembled. Dark, stormy, and delicious, once it sinks its teeth into you there’s no escape. Vampires! Whether imagined by Bram Stoker or Anne Rice, they are part of the human lexicon and as old as blood itself. They are your neighbors, your friends, and they are always lurking. Now Otto Penzler editor of the bestselling Black Lizard Big Book of Pulps has compiled the darkest, the scariest, and by far the most evil collection of vampire stories ever. With over eighty stories, including the works of Stephen King and D. H. Lawrence, alongside Lord Byron and Tanith Lee, not to mention Edgar Allan Poe and Harlan Ellison, The Vampire Archives will drive a stake through the heart of any other collection out there. Other contributors include: Arthur Conan Doyle Ray Bradbury Ambrose Bierce H. P. Lovecraft Harlan Ellison Roger Zelazny Robert Bloch Clive Barker

The Lineup

A great recurring character in a series you love becomes an old friend. You learn about their strange quirks and their haunted pasts and root for them every time they face danger. But where do some of the most fascinating sleuths in the mystery and thriller world really come from? What was the real life location that inspired Michael Connelly to make Harry Bosch a Vietnam vet tunnel rat? Why is Lee Child’s Jack Reacher a drifter? How did a brief encounter in Botswana inspire Alexander McCall Smith to create Precious Ramotswe? In The Lineup, some of the top mystery writers in the world tell about the genesis of their most beloved characters or, in some cases, let their creations do the talking. The following characters and their creators are featured in this collection:Jack Taylor by Ken BruenJack Reacher by Lee ChildHieronymus Bosch by Michael ConnellyCharlie Parker by John ConnollyElvis Cole and Joe Pike by Robert CraisLincoln Rhyme by Jeffery DeaverInspector Morse by Colin DexterCharlie Resnick by John HarveyBob Lee Swagger by Stephen HunterPeter Decker and Rina Lazarus by Faye KellermanAlex Delaware by Jonathan KellermanDismas Hardy by John LescroartTess Monaghan by Laura LippmanRambo by David MorrellMallory by Carol O’ConnellSpenser by Robert B. ParkerLou Boldt by Ridley PearsonCharlotte and Thomas Pitt by Anne PerryAloysius X. L. Pendergast by Douglas Preston and Lincoln ChildJohn Rebus by Ian RankinPrecious Ramotswe by Alexander McCall Smith

Black Noir

Some of the best known and most influential pieces of crime fiction have been from African American writers. Be it Walter Mosley’s great detective Easy Rawlins, or the mean streets of Harlem at the hands of Chester Himes, the stories and characters in this anthology have shaped the mystery genre with their own unique viewpoints and styles. Contributors to the collection include Robert Greer, Chester Himes, Walter Mosley, Cary Phillips, Frankie Bailey, and Richard Wright.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2009

Best selling novelist Jeffrey Deaver edits this latest collection of the genre’s finest from the past year. Featuring ‘gritty tales told with panache,’ this is a ‘must read for anybody who cares about crime stories’ Booklist.

Agents of Treachery

For the first time ever, legendary editor Otto Penzler has handpicked some of the most respected and bestselling thriller writers working today for a riveting collection of spy fiction. From first to last, this stellar collection signals mission accomplished. Including: Lee Child with an incredible look at the formation of a special ops cell. James Grady writing about an Arab undercover FBI agent with an active cell. Joseph Finder riffing on a Boston architect who’s convinced his Persian neighbors are up to no good. John Lawton concocting a Len Deighton esque story about British intelligence. Stephen Hunter thrilling us with a tale about a WWII brigade. Full list of Contributors:James Grady, Charles McCarry, Lee Child, Joseph Finder, John Lawton, John Weisman, Stephen Hunter, Gayle Lynds, David Morrell, Andrew Klavan, Robert Wilson, Dan Fesperman, Stella Rimington, Olen Steinhauer

The Black Lizard Big Book of Black Mask Stories

An unstoppable anthology of crime stories culled from Black Mask magazine the legendary publication that turned a pulp phenomenon into literary mainstream. Black Mask was the apotheosis of noir. It was the magazine where the first hardboiled detective story, which was written by Carroll John Daly appeared. It was the slum in which such American literary titans like Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler got their start, and it was the home of stories with titles like Murder Is Bad Luck, Ten Carets of Lead, and Drop Dead Twice. Collected here is best of the best, the hardest of the hardboiled, and the darkest of the dark of America’s finest crime fiction. This masterpiece collection represents a high watermark of America s underbelly. Crime writing gets no better than this. Featuring Deadly Diamonds Dancing Rats A Prize Fighter Fighting for His Life A Parrot that Wouldn t Talk Including Dashiell Hammett s The Maltese Falcon as it was originally published Lester Dent’s Luck in print for the first time

The Best American Mystery Stories 2010

Best selling novelist Lee Child edits this latest collection of the genre’s finest from the past year. Featuring gritty tales told with panache, this is a must read for anybody who cares about crime stories Booklist.

The Best American Noir of the Century

Well worth its impressive weight in gold, it would be a crime not to have this seminal masterpiece in your collection. New York Journal of BooksIn his introduction to The Best American Noir of the Century, James Ellroy writes, Noir is the most scrutinized offshoot of the hard boiled school of fiction. It’s the long drop off the short pier and the wrong man and the wrong woman in perfect misalliance. It s the nightmare of flawed souls with big dreams and the precise how and why of the all time sure thing that goes bad. Offering the best examples of literary sure things gone bad, this collection ensures that nowhere else can readers find a darker, more thorough distillation of American noir fiction. James Ellroy and Otto Penzler mined writings of the past century to find this treasure trove of thirty nine stories. From noir s twenties era infancy come gems like James M. Cain s Pastorale, and its postwar heyday boasts giants like Mickey Spillane and Evan Hunter. Packing an undeniable punch, diverse contemporary incarnations include Elmore Leonard, Patricia Highsmith, Joyce Carol Oates, Dennis Lehane, and William Gay, with many page turners appearing from the past decade. Delightfully devilish…
A strange trek through the years that includes stories from household names in the hard boiled genre to lesser known authors who nonetheless can hold their own with the legends. Associated PressJames Ellroy is the author of the Underworld U.S.A. trilogy American Tabloid, The Cold Six Thousand, and Blood s a Rover and the L.A. Quartet novels, The Black Dahlia, The Big Nowhere, L.A. Confidential, and White Jazz. His most recent book is The Hillicker Curse, a memoir. Otto Penzler is the founder of the Mysterious Bookshop and Mysterious Press, has won two Edgar Allan Poe Awards most recently for The Lineup, and is series editor of The Best American Mystery Stories.

Christmas at The Mysterious Bookshop

Each year, for the past seventeen years, Otto Penzler, owner of the legendary Mysterious Bookshop in New York City, has commissioned an original story by a leading mystery writer. The requirements were that it be a mystery/ crime/suspense story, that it be set during the Christmas season, and that at least some of the action must take place in The Mysterious Bookshop. These stories were then produced as pamphlets, 1,000 copies, and given to customers of the bookstore as a Christmas present. Now, all of these stories have been collected in one volume Christmas at The Mysterious Bookshop. Some of the tales are humorous, others suspenseful, and still others mystifying. This charming one of a kind collection is a perfect Christmas gift, appropriate for all ages and tastes. Contributors include:Charles Ardai Lisa Atkinson George Baxt Lawrence Block Mary Higgins Clark Thomas H. Cook Ron Goulart Jeremiah Healy Edward D. Hoch Rupert Holmes Andrew Klavan Michael Malone Ed McBain Anne Perry S. J. Rozan Jonathan Santlofer Donald E. Westlake

The Greatest Russian Stories of Crime and Suspense

The greatest Russian crime and mystery fiction including Acunin, Chekhov, Dostoevsky, Gogol, Nabokov, Pushkin, and Tolstoy. Many of the greatest Russian authors, including Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Chekhov and Pushkin, produced crime and mystery fiction, a type of literature that was largely suppressed during the Soviet era because it did not glorify the state but, instead, gave individual characters the significance that the U.S.S.R. despised. With the fall of the Soviet Union, mystery writers have become some of the most successful novelists in Russia, and there is a renewed interest in, and appreciation of, the great crime classics of an earlier era. There have been few policemen, and virtually no private detectives or amateur sleuths, in Russian history worthy of approbation, and in consequence its literature is dramatically different from its Western counterparts. Criminals in Mother Russia tend to be caught or punished by their own consciences or by ghosts, and the notion of a criminal trial as we know it is utterly alien. Nonetheless, the enormous talent and passion of Russian authors has long been justly acclaimed, and the rare forays they made into the loosely defined genre of mystery fiction rank among the world’s classics. This volume is the first collection ever devoted entirely to Russian crime fiction. Among the esteemed contributors are Anton Chekhov, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Nicolai Gogol, Maxim Gorky, Vladimir Nabokov, Vil Lipitov, Alexander Pushkin, Lev Sheinen, Boris Sokoloff and Leo Tolstoy.

The Best American Mystery Stories 2011

Best selling novelist Harlan Coben, a master of suspense and creator of the critically acclaimed Myron Bolitar series, edits this latest collection of the must reads in mysteries from the past year.

The Big Book of Adventure Stories

A hair raising collection of adventure stories that’s so big and enthralling if you open it you may never be seen again: enter at your own risk. Everyone loves adventure, and Otto Penzler has collected the best adventure stories of all time into one mammoth volume. With stories by Jack London, O. Henry, H. Rider Haggard, Alastair MacLean, Talbot Mundy, Cornell Woolrich, and many others, this wide reaching and fascinating volume contains some of the best characters from the most thrilling adventure tales, including The Cisco Kid; Sheena, Queen of the Jungle; Bulldog Drummond; Tarzan; The Scarlet Pimpernel; Conan the Barbarian; Hopalong Cassidy; King Kong; Zorro; and The Spider. Divided into sections that embody the greatest themes of the genre Sword & Sorcery, Megalomania Rules, Man vs. Nature, Island Paradise, Sand and Sun, Something Feels Funny, Go West Young Man, Future Shock, I Spy, Yellow Peril, In Darkest Africa it is destined to be the greatest collection of adventure stories ever compiled. Featuring:Lawless open seasFerocious army antsDeadeyed gunmenExotic desert islandsFeverish jungle adventures Including:The story that introduced The Cisco KidThe complete novel of Tarzan the Terrible

Zombies! Zombies! Zombies!

Zombies! Zombies! Zombies! is the darkest, the living deadliest, scariest and dare we say most tasteful collection of zombie stories ever assembled. It’s so good, it’s a no brainer. There is never a dull moment in the world of zombies. They are superstars of horror and they are everywhere, storming the world of print and visual media. Their endless march will never be stopped. It’s the Zombie Zeitgeist! Now, with his wide sweep of knowledge and keen eye for great storytelling, Otto Penzler offers a remarkable catalog of zombie literature. Including unstoppable tales from world renowned authors like Stephen King, Joe R. Lansdale, Robert McCammon, Robert E. Howard, and Richard Matheson to the writer who started it all, W.B. Seabrook, Zombies! Zombies! Zombies! will delight and devour horror fans from coast to coast. Featuring: Deadly bites Satanic Pigeons A parade of corpses Zombies, zombies, and more zombies

Related Authors

Leave a Comment