Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Book of Extraordinary Impossible Crimes and Puzzling Deaths - The Best New Original Stories of the Genre - cover

The Book of Extraordinary Impossible Crimes and Puzzling Deaths - The Best New Original Stories of the Genre

Martin Edwards, O'Neil De Noux, Jared Cade, Amy Myers, Keith Brooke, Michael Bracken, Sandra Murphy, Ashley Lister, Paula Charles, Bev Vincent, Deryn Lake, Eric Brown, Jane Finnis, John Grant, David Quantick, Rhys Hughes, Christine Poulson, L. C. Tyler, Lavie Tidhar

Publisher: Mango Media

  • 2
  • 3
  • 0

Summary

This anthology draws together some of the best new stories of mystery and murder—compiled by the Anthony Award–winning crime fiction editor. This anthology collects the most original stories of murder by some of mystery fiction's most inventive talents from the United States and United Kingdom. With innovative new takes on locked-room mysteries and impossible crimes, these short stories are full of vexing conundrums and reality-defying puzzles. A murder has been committed—but how could it have happened? Curated by Maxim Jakubowski, one of the crime genre’s most renowned editors, this volume features never-before-seen stories by acclaimed authors—including British Science Fiction Award–winner Eric Brown, Derringer Award–winner O'Neil de Noux, and multiple CWA Dagger Award–winners and nominees.
Available since: 06/16/2020.
Print length: 305 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • Harper's Young People Vol 01 Issue 04 Nov 25 1879 - cover

    Harper's Young People Vol 01...

    Various Various

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Harper's Young People upon its first publication in 1879 was an illustrated weekly publication containing delightful serialized stories, short stories, fiction and nonfiction, anecdotes, jokes, artwork, and more for children. This fourth issue of the series was published on November 25, 1879. Published by Harper & Brothers, known for their other publications Harper's Bazaar and Harper's Magazine.  Summary by Jill Engle.
    Show book
  • The Blue Bedroom and Other Stories - cover

    The Blue Bedroom and Other Stories

    Rosamunde Pilcher

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    #1 New York Times bestselling author Rosamunde Pilcher invites listeners to share the full spectrum of life’s moods and emotions through the thirteen stories gathered here in her very first collection of short fiction. From a child’s first knowledge of death, through city and country, to an elderly woman's newfound freedom, Pilcher’s The Blue Bedroom & Other Stories is “breathtaking…a book you want to keep, to read and re-read” (Grand Rapids Press).
    Show book
  • I'm Afraid That's All We've Got Time For - cover

    I'm Afraid That's All We've Got...

    Jen Calleja

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A novelist questions why she's been shortlisted for the Prize of Prize's Prize; an artist duo has a messy break up; a schoolgirl is saved from a predator by a flash flood and a gang of dead animals; a surgeon has an incurable identity crisis; a budding actor can't see what's so funny; a pregnant food writer gets a craving for luxury consumerism.
    These thirteen stories by writer and literary translator Jen Calleja pick apart the hidden motivations behind our desires, and the ways we seek out distraction from difficult truths. They investigate histories, power dynamics, rituals, institutions – the roles we adopt, as well as the ones we inherit.
    Known for her acclaimed poetry and translations, and as a performer in numerous bands, these facets manifest in an attention to the latent ambivalence of language, and the nature of storytelling itself. This writing is direct and considered – it asks to be read, read out loud, retold, refashioned into fables with a distinctive mouthfeel.
    I'm Afraid That's All We've Got Time For is a sharp, bold, inventive and prescient fictional debut from a versatile and brilliant writer.
    Show book
  • The Man Who Stole a Meeting House - cover

    The Man Who Stole a Meeting House

    John Townsend Trowbridge

    • 1
    • 0
    • 0
    A group of travellers are telling increasingly tall tales about horse thieves and robbers...but one traveller's story trumps the lot. It is the story of a miserly farmer who steals a meeting house and carries it off. But his plans do not go at all as he expects...
    Show book
  • Mosaic of Air - Short Stories - cover

    Mosaic of Air - Short Stories

    Cherry Potts

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Delving into lecturing spiders, Helen of Troy, seaside libraries, computers that fall in love, murder and memory; but most of all humour, and a delight in all that women can be.
    
    Praise for the first edition:
    Cherry Potts writes with economy, punch, panache. - Ellen Galford
    Definitely about women in space, not the usual glossy tomboys of standard sf. - Gwyneth Jones
    Delightful … both a hilarious spoof of one-man-and-his computer myths such as 2001, a Space Odyssey; and a reflection on the limits of love and power. - Zoë Fairbairns
    Show book
  • Two Tuppenny Ones Please - cover

    Two Tuppenny Ones Please

    Katherine Mansfield

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923) was a prominent modernist writer of short fiction and a close associate of D. H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf. 
    "Two Tuppenny Ones, Please" is an evocative sketch of an overheard conversation between two women (and a bus conducter) on an omnibus during the First World War.
    Show book