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Books in Crime Masterworks series

  • I Am Legend

    Richard Matheson

    Paperback (Orion Publishing Group, March 1, 2010)
    An-acclaimed-SF-novel-about-vampires-The-last-man-on-earth-is-not-alone-Robert-Neville-is-the-last-living-man-on-Earth-but-he-is-not-alone-Every-other-man-woman-and-child-on-the-planet-has-become-a-vampire-and-they-are-hungry-for-Nevilles-blood-By-day-he-is-the-hunter-stalking-the-undead-through-the-ruins-of-civilisation-By-night-he-barricades-himself-in-his-home-and-prays-for-the-dawn-How-long-can-one-man-survive-like-this
  • The Deep Blue Goodbye

    John D. MacDonald

    Paperback (Orion Pub Co, Feb. 28, 2002)
    Travis McGee, beach bum and 'salvage expert' (he'll retrieve what you've lost for 50 per cent), lives on a houseboat in Fort Lauderdale. Instead of taking retirement at sixty, he takes it in chunks as he goes along. If he likes you he'll help you, and he likes Cathy Kerr, who has been robbed of everything but her dignity...the first in the series establishes the fast-talking, wisecracking standard MacDonald maintained for over 20 years.
  • The Glass Key

    Dashiell Hammett

    Paperback (Orion Pub Co, March 31, 2002)
    Ned Beaumont is a tall, thin, moustache-wearing, TB-ridden, drinking, gambling, hanger-on to the political boss of a corrupt Eastern city. Nevertheless, like every Hammett hero (and like Hammett himself), he has an unbreakable, if idiosyncratic moral code. Ned's boss wants to better himself with a thoroughbred senator's daughter; but does he want it badly enough to commit murder? If he's innocent, who wants him in the frame? Beaumont must find out.
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  • The Glass Key

    Dashiell Hammett

    Hardcover (Orion, March 15, 2002)
    None
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  • The Murders in the Rue Morgue

    Edgar Allan Poe

    Hardcover (Orion, March 21, 2002)
    None
  • The Deep Blue Goodbye

    John D. MacDonald

    Hardcover (Orion, March 15, 2002)
    The Deep Blue Good-by is the first of 21 novels in the Travis McGee series by American author John D. MacDonald. Commissioned in 1964 by Fawcett Publications editor Knox Burger, the book establishes for the series an investigative protagonist in a residential Florida base. All titles in the 21-volume series include a color, a mnemonic device which was suggested by his publisher so that when harried travelers in airports looked to buy a book, they could at once see those MacDonald titles they had not yet read. (MacDonald also included color in a further two unrelated novels: A Flash of Green and The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything).
  • Dance Hall of the Dead

    Tony Hillerman

    Paperback (Orion Pub Co, June 30, 2002)
    When two young boys disappear, one of them leaving a pool of blood behind, Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn of the Navajo Tribal Police finds himself not only tracking a ruthless and brutal killer but caught up in the intricate mysteries of the Zuni religion as well. For the dead boy was to have played a key role in an important ritual of the Zuni people. An added complication in the investigation and search is the missing boys' interest in an archeological dig that seems to be on the brink of proving a controversial theory. And the FBI's blind certainty that it's all related to a small hippy commune's drug dealing doesn't exactly help either. Leaphorn patiently tracks the murderer into the desert to a terrifying confrontation...
  • The Maltese Falcon

    Dashiell Hammett

    Hardcover (Orion, March 21, 2002)
    None
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  • Dance Hall of the Dead

    Tony Hillerman

    Hardcover (Orion, July 18, 2002)
    None
  • The Maltese Falcon

    Dashiell Hammett

    Hardcover (Open Secret Publishing, Sept. 3, 2002)
    None
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  • The Murders in the Rue Morgue

    Edgar Allan Poe

    Paperback (Orion Pub Co, March 1, 2002)
    1st Crime Masterworks 2002 trade edition paperback fine In stock shipped from our UK warehouse
  • The Time Machine

    H.G. Wells

    Hardcover (Orion, Sept. 15, 2010)
    A Victorian scientist develops a time machine and travels to the year 802,171 AD. There he finds the meek, child-like Eloi who live in fear of the underground-dwelling Morlocks. When his time machine goes missing, the Traveller faces a fight to enter the Morlocks' domain and return to his own time.THE TIME MACHINE remains one of the cornerstones of science-fiction literature and has proved hugely influential.
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