[Originally posted July 24, 2011]
Often, libraries really are your best bet for books that aren't in print anymore.
1. The Undertaker's Gone Bananas (Rec. #16), by Paul Zindel: An undertaker goes bananas and two teen misfits solve the mystery.
2. Summer Half (Rec. #40),
by Angela Thirkell: Teachers, schoolmasters, students (and their
relations) enjoy an English summer during the interwar period.
[in print at the moment!]
3. I Married a Dead Man (Rec. #47), by Cornell Woolrich: Young couple killed, desperate pregnant woman, stolen identity, blackmail, murder = classic noir.
4. The Moving Toyshop (Rec. #60), by Edmund Crispin: A poet's discovery of a dead body leads to a romp through Oxford.
[in print at the moment!]
5. When the Messenger Is Hot (Rec. #73), by Elizabeth Crane: Basically a collection of short, extra-chatty monologues.
6. Ascending Peculiarity (Rec. #80),
by Edward Gorey: In this collection of interviews, Edward Gorey shares
his thoughts on cats, French symbolist poetry, yard sales, George
Balanchine, soap operas, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
7. Crewe Train (Rec. #84), by Rose Macaulay: Denham Dobie adjusts to the social whirl of 1920s London.
8. Night at the Vulcan (Rec. #102), by Ngaio Marsh: A Golden Age mystery novel set in a British theater.
[in print at the moment!]
9. Open to the Public (Rec. #107), by Muriel Spark: Spark has fun with some rather bloodthirsty stories.
10. Come Up and See Me Sometime (Rec. #122), by Erika Krouse: Thirteen stories tied together by Mae West quotes.
11. Magdalena the Sinner (Rec. #124), by Lilan Faschinger: A woman disguised as a nun kidnaps a priest and forces him to hear her confession.
12. Tex and Molly in the Afterlife (Rec. #142),
by Richard Grant: A couple who fell down a well find themselves in an
afterlife quest to stop a corporate doer of environmental evil. In the
manner of Tom Robbins.
13. Light Can Be Both Wave and Particle (Rec. #159), by Ellen Gilchrist: An excellent collection of short stories.
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