G - Y TITLES







Fawcett: 1962

         

         Somewhere at this moment Bonny Lee and Kirby are driving some one 

         mad, and enjoying every moment of it.

         If you have ever had a yeasty yearning for complete freedom and

         complete immunity, you will covet something those two have. This

         book will tell you what to look for, and how to use it if you can

         steal it.

         Best of luck.

         In this book, John D. MacDonald turns from suspense to

         A story of fantasy . . .


Fawcett:  1982


 JDM chose these stories after Francis Nevins and Martin Greenberg, along

Walter ,Jean Shine, and Sam Gowen’s help in assembling them out  of 

hundreds of short stories he had published in the pulps between 1947 and 

1952, at the urging of Nevins and Greenberg, who thought the project would 

be very worthwhile.  Sales of the collection proved them right.


 Table of contents:


“Murder for Money”    “ A Time For Dying” “Death Writes the Answer” 

 “Noose For A Tigress       “Miranda”   “Murder In Mind”

“They Let Me Live”   “Check Out At Dawn         “Breathe No More”                           

 “She Cannot Die”  “From Some Hidden Grave”   “Dead On The Pin”

“ A Trap For The Careless”



Fawcett:  1984

Sales of The Good Old Stuff proved to be so good that a second collection was published two years later in 1984.


Table of Contents:  


“Deadly Damsel”        “State Police Report That”   “Death For Sale”

“ A Corpse In His Dreams”        “I Accuse Myself”  “ A Place To Live”

“Neighborly Interest”     “The Night Is Over”  “Secret Stain”

“Even Up The Odds”  “ Verdict”  “ The High Grey Walls Of Hate”

“Unmarrried Widow”   “You Remember Jeanie”







          Fawcett:  1951

         

         She turned to face him and all the light had gone out of her blue eyes. 

        They looked dead, long buried.

         "It's only a matter of time," she said. "I know sooner or later you'll ask 

        me how I became what I am. Men seem   to have a compulsion to ask that 

        question. So let's have a pact. Don't ask me, and you won't make it 

        necessary or me to invent some tragic story to satisfy your curiosity.

         "Just take me for . . . granted," she whispered.







Fawcett: 1962

         

         In this swift and striking novel, John D. MacDonald examines the

         ferment of a big-time convention - the plots, the savage

         maneuverings, the dreadful ease with which a man or a dream can

         be  destroyed.






Doubleday: 1966


        MURDER AT SEA.

         NO SURVIVORS.

         NO EVIDENCE.

         NO REASON NOT TO BE $800,000 RICHER.


         Crissy Harkinson knew all about the cash that had left the Gold

         Coast of Florida, headed for the Bahamas on board a pleasure boat.

         It was Texas money—unrecorded, intended as a bribe. And there was

         enough of it left to change a dozen lives. Or end them . .










Dell, 1959


Mystery Writers of America anthology, edited, with intro by JDM









DELL:  1957

LOST WEEKENDS IN THE BAHAMAS SUN—AND BENEATH THE RUM-DAZED SURFACE 

OF THE HOUSE-PARTIES RAGED A TITANIC STRUGGLE FOR POWER.


There were enough girls for everyone. And Mike Dean had a use for all of them. He used them as he would his liquor, his sunshine,his hospitality, his own personal magnetism—to take other  men's minds off their troubles, to soften their consciences, to muddy their good sense, to bend them to his will.

But one of his house guests refused to see things Mike Dean's way.

One of them had a mind of his his own, and a heart of his own. One of them wouldn't be bought. 

He is the Hero of this fascinating behind the scenes novel of corporate power and glory and corruption.




       1951 by Fawcett:  1951

         

         "SHE MAY LOOK LIKE AN ANGEL . . . but she's a tramp."

         That's when I hit him, my best friend. I thought of Laura and our

         three day honeymoon. I thought of the sting of her full lips, the

         long, lush lines of her warm, wonderful body, her throaty,

         delighted laugh. And I thought of all the nights we were going to

         spend together.

         Paul had stumbled to his feet, and there was blood on his mouth.

         "You need a keeper," he said heavilly and contemptuously. "To save

         you from yourself—and her."




First published 1956 by Dell

          Murder In The Wind is, beyond a doubt, one of the most compelling

         and suspenseful of Macdonald’s novels. . An awesomely described hurricane 

         literally drives his fascinating cast of characters together. Their refuge from the 

           driving wind and rising water become a sort of grand (and grisly) hotel.

         (NOTE:  WEST COAST FLORIDA RESIDENTS SHOULD READ THIS BOOK--

        AND CONDOMINIUM-- EACH SPRING LEST THEY BECOME COMPLACENT....)


   

Lippencott: 1977


Welcome to Golden Sands, the dream condominium built on a weak foundation 

and a thousand dirty secrets. JDM’s powerful novel is a panoramic look at the 

shocking facts of life in a Sun Belt community: the real estate swindles and political

 payoffs, the maintenance charges that run up, and the health benefits that run out,

 the crack-ups and marital breakdowns, the disaster that awaits those who play in

 the path of a hurricane.





  Fawcett: 1953


The smell of stale bedrooms and warm gin hovered over that whole section of town.  the women, even the young girls, walked a certain way.

There was a drifting threat of violence everywhere, and the kids of the neighborhood knew all about knives, garrison belts and bicycle chains long before they were pushed into high school by weary truant officers.


    Fawcett 1968

The best-selling author of the Travis McGee novels tells the riveting tru story of the notorious 

Coppolino murder trial.


Note:  JDM paid tribute to John Pete Zenk who had suggested he write about the trial, and who

 worked  with JDM “all the way” as JDM noted.

In 1996,  as a guest at our 6th John D. MacDonald Conference,  in Sarasota, Florida, we heard a 

very touching story by John Pete Zenk.  The setting was MacDonald’s home, now owned by 

a private party, who invited all conferees to have a barbecue lunch on the verandah.  

Mr. Zenk told us that in 1985, while he was undergoing a very difficult time, both personally and 

medically, and a check for a sizable sum of money appeared out of nowhere--the 

explanation was that it was for some”royalties” long overdue from further sales of the book.  

There was not a dry  eye in the house when Zenk told us that it was not until after JDM’s death 

that he found out that the money was simply given by JDM to Zenk under the “guise” of a

 royalty payment.





         1981 by Harper and Row: 1981

         John D. MacDonald & Captain John H. Kilpack

         FOR CRUISE VETERANS

         FOR ARMCHAIR TRAVELERS

         NOTHING CAN GO WRONG . . . But everything does in this exciting

         tale of the last long cruise of a U.S. passenger ship by superb

         storyteller Captain John H. Kilpack and renowned author John D.

         MacDonald.

         When the S.S. MARISPOSA set sail in 1977 for a 77-day journey from

         San Francisco to Leningrad and back, crazy antics, practical

         jokes, human quirks, and an old ship with more than its share of

         mechanical troubles created a memorable adventure for everyone

         aboard.

         This wild tour takes us twice through the Panama Canal, to more

         than a dozen European ports, to Alaska, and to sultry Caribbean

         isles in a uniquely amusing and entertaining book.





        Fawcett: 1963

         

         Who in the hell did she think she was, plunging into his present

         life, pleading with him to forget his past, promissing him the

         impossible?

         Sid Shanley couldn't stay in one place very long. He had to keep

         on the run, changing towns, changing jobs, changing women. He

         worked out the perfect setup—no attachments, no trails, no

         explanations. But now a girl had caught up with him. Her name was

         Paula—and a million dollars lay behind her strange invitation . .




         Fawcett: 1961

         

         ARCHITECT OF EVIL

         Step by step, Dwight McAran built a wall of vicious hate around

         himself.

         It was easy. He was a man who could slap one woman to death

         because she loved him, and hum a love song to another while he

         raped her.

         Sure, he did some time in jail. He sat in a cell for five long

         years until he harbored a core of stark, steaming evil designed to

         explode in a fury of vengeance.

         Revenge was all he craved—and a plan was what he had—a plan just

         cruel enough to please him, just crazy enough to work.




   Knopf: 1984

         Remember all those televangelist  scandals in the late 80’s ?

        JDM wrote this book years before.....prescient as usual...





Fawcett  1960


SHE WOULD NEVER ESCAPE HER PAST--HER FATE TO BE CAUGHT FOREVER IN THE SICK GLITTER OF THE GREAT SUCKER TRAP.


Coney Island in the desert.  Miami Beach with an ocean. Nothing but sand and neon and money, money, everywhere.  Big-name entertainers rubbing elbows with big name ganGsters over the green-baize craps tables.


Bare-breasted showgirls conning the big spenders in the small hours.  All-night marriage chapels......Little white balls bouncing around all the roulette wheels....


World without end....


VEGAS!!!!







Simon and Schuster:   1959

        

         ART, EROTICA, AND TEQUILA

         When a jaded exponent of the Fast Buck hitches his starload of

         schemes to the salacious bent of a well-heeled, well-oiled

         divorcee, the result is a daffy mail-ordered Mexican art colony

         known as the Cuernavaca Summer Workshop.

         The unique goings-on and comings-off of the members of this

         oddball establishment are the stuff a he-mans dreams are made of.

         It is a positively no-money-back, uninhibited, unabridged romp

         through passion and Picasso, under the naked Mexican sun, where

         East meets West, North meets South, Madison Avenue goes native,

         and the long-stemmed Texas lovelies unveil their astonishing

         natural equipment in the hallowed name of Culture.


(NOTE:  A REALLY  “FUN “ READ)






        Dell: 1957

       

         She was so alive and he needed her so badly there was nothing to

         do but kill her . . .





Lippencott: 1977


Welcome to Golden Sands, the dream condominium built on a weak foundation 

and a thousand dirty secrets. JDM’s powerful novel is a panoramic look at the 

shocking facts of life in a Sun Belt community: the real estate swindles and political

 payoffs, the maintenance charges that run up, and the health benefits that run out,

 the crack-ups and marital breakdowns, the disaster that awaits those who play in

 the path of a hurricane.








DELL:  1957

LOST WEEKENDS IN THE BAHAMAS SUN—AND BENEATH THE RUM-DAZED SURFACE 

OF THE HOUSE-PARTIES RAGED A TITANIC STRUGGLE FOR POWER.


There were enough girls for everyone. And Mike Dean had a use for all of them. He used them as he would his liquor, his sunshine,his hospitality, his own personal magnetism—to take other  men's minds off their troubles, to soften their consciences, to muddy their good sense, to bend them to his will.

But one of his house guests refused to see things Mike Dean's way.

One of them had a mind of his his own, and a heart of his own. One of them wouldn't be bought. 

He is the Hero of this fascinating behind the scenes novel of corporate power and glory and corruption.




       1951 by Fawcett:  1951

         

         "SHE MAY LOOK LIKE AN ANGEL . . . but she's a tramp."

         That's when I hit him, my best friend. I thought of Laura and our

         three day honeymoon. I thought of the sting of her full lips, the

         long, lush lines of her warm, wonderful body, her throaty,

         delighted laugh. And I thought of all the nights we were going to

         spend together.

         Paul had stumbled to his feet, and there was blood on his mouth.

         "You need a keeper," he said heavilly and contemptuously. "To save

         you from yourself—and her."




First published 1956 by Dell

          Murder In The Wind is, beyond a doubt, one of the most compelling

         and suspenseful of Macdonald’s novels. . An awesomely described hurricane 

         literally drives his fascinating cast of characters together. Their refuge from the 

           driving wind and rising water become a sort of grand (and grisly) hotel.

         (NOTE:  WEST COAST FLORIDA RESIDENTS SHOULD READ THIS BOOK--

        AND CONDOMINIUM-- EACH SPRING LEST THEY BECOME COMPLACENT....)


   

Lippencott: 1977


Welcome to Golden Sands, the dream condominium built on a weak foundation 

and a thousand dirty secrets. JDM’s powerful novel is a panoramic look at the 

shocking facts of life in a Sun Belt community: the real estate swindles and political

 payoffs, the maintenance charges that run up, and the health benefits that run out,

 the crack-ups and marital breakdowns, the disaster that awaits those who play in

 the path of a hurricane.





  Fawcett: 1953


The smell of stale bedrooms and warm gin hovered over that whole section of town.  the women, even the young girls, walked a certain way.

There was a drifting threat of violence everywhere, and the kids of the neighborhood knew all about knives, garrison belts and bicycle chains long before they were pushed into high school by weary truant officers.


    Fawcett 1968

The best-selling author of the Travis McGee novels tells the riveting tru story of the notorious 

Coppolino murder trial.


Note:  JDM paid tribute to John Pete Zenk who had suggested he write about the trial, and who

 worked  with JDM “all the way” as JDM noted.

In 1996,  as a guest at our 6th John D. MacDonald Conference,  in Sarasota, Florida, we heard a 

very touching story by John Pete Zenk.  The setting was MacDonald’s home, now owned by 

a private party, who invited all conferees to have a barbecue lunch on the verandah.  

Mr. Zenk told us that in 1985, while he was undergoing a very difficult time, both personally and 

medically, and a check for a sizable sum of money appeared out of nowhere--the 

explanation was that it was for some”royalties” long overdue from further sales of the book.  

There was not a dry  eye in the house when Zenk told us that it was not until after JDM’s death 

that he found out that the money was simply given by JDM to Zenk under the “guise” of a

 royalty payment.





         1981 by Harper and Row: 1981

         John D. MacDonald & Captain John H. Kilpack

         FOR CRUISE VETERANS

         FOR ARMCHAIR TRAVELERS

         NOTHING CAN GO WRONG . . . But everything does in this exciting

         tale of the last long cruise of a U.S. passenger ship by superb

         storyteller Captain John H. Kilpack and renowned author John D.

         MacDonald.

         When the S.S. MARISPOSA set sail in 1977 for a 77-day journey from

         San Francisco to Leningrad and back, crazy antics, practical

         jokes, human quirks, and an old ship with more than its share of

         mechanical troubles created a memorable adventure for everyone

         aboard.

         This wild tour takes us twice through the Panama Canal, to more

         than a dozen European ports, to Alaska, and to sultry Caribbean

         isles in a uniquely amusing and entertaining book.





        Fawcett: 1963

         

         Who in the hell did she think she was, plunging into his present

         life, pleading with him to forget his past, promissing him the

         impossible?

         Sid Shanley couldn't stay in one place very long. He had to keep

         on the run, changing towns, changing jobs, changing women. He

         worked out the perfect setup—no attachments, no trails, no

         explanations. But now a girl had caught up with him. Her name was

         Paula—and a million dollars lay behind her strange invitation . .




         Fawcett: 1961

         

         ARCHITECT OF EVIL

         Step by step, Dwight McAran built a wall of vicious hate around

         himself.

         It was easy. He was a man who could slap one woman to death

         because she loved him, and hum a love song to another while he

         raped her.

         Sure, he did some time in jail. He sat in a cell for five long

         years until he harbored a core of stark, steaming evil designed to

         explode in a fury of vengeance.

         Revenge was all he craved—and a plan was what he had—a plan just

         cruel enough to please him, just crazy enough to work.




   Knopf: 1984

         Remember all those televangelist  scandals in the late 80’s ?

        JDM wrote this book years before.....prescient as usual...





Fawcett  1960


SHE WOULD NEVER ESCAPE HER PAST--HER FATE TO BE CAUGHT FOREVER IN THE SICK GLITTER OF THE GREAT SUCKER TRAP.


Coney Island in the desert.  Miami Beach with an ocean. Nothing but sand and neon and money, money, everywhere.  Big-name entertainers rubbing elbows with big name ganGsters over the green-baize craps tables.


Bare-breasted showgirls conning the big spenders in the small hours.  All-night marriage chapels......Little white balls bouncing around all the roulette wheels....


World without end....


VEGAS!!!!







Simon and Schuster:   1959

        

         ART, EROTICA, AND TEQUILA

         When a jaded exponent of the Fast Buck hitches his starload of

         schemes to the salacious bent of a well-heeled, well-oiled

         divorcee, the result is a daffy mail-ordered Mexican art colony

         known as the Cuernavaca Summer Workshop.

         The unique goings-on and comings-off of the members of this

         oddball establishment are the stuff a he-mans dreams are made of.

         It is a positively no-money-back, uninhibited, unabridged romp

         through passion and Picasso, under the naked Mexican sun, where

         East meets West, North meets South, Madison Avenue goes native,

         and the long-stemmed Texas lovelies unveil their astonishing

         natural equipment in the hallowed name of Culture.


(NOTE:  A REALLY  “FUN “ READ)






        Dell: 1957

       

         She was so alive and he needed her so badly there was nothing to

         do but kill her . . .





Lippencott: 1977


Welcome to Golden Sands, the dream condominium built on a weak foundation 

and a thousand dirty secrets. JDM’s powerful novel is a panoramic look at the 

shocking facts of life in a Sun Belt community: the real estate swindles and political

 payoffs, the maintenance charges that run up, and the health benefits that run out,

 the crack-ups and marital breakdowns, the disaster that awaits those who play in

 the path of a hurricane.








DELL:  1957

LOST WEEKENDS IN THE BAHAMAS SUN—AND BENEATH THE RUM-DAZED SURFACE 

OF THE HOUSE-PARTIES RAGED A TITANIC STRUGGLE FOR POWER.


There were enough girls for everyone. And Mike Dean had a use for all of them. He used them as he would his liquor, his sunshine,his hospitality, his own personal magnetism—to take other  men's minds off their troubles, to soften their consciences, to muddy their good sense, to bend them to his will.

But one of his house guests refused to see things Mike Dean's way.

One of them had a mind of his his own, and a heart of his own. One of them wouldn't be bought. 

He is the Hero of this fascinating behind the scenes novel of corporate power and glory and corruption.




       1951 by Fawcett:  1951

         

         "SHE MAY LOOK LIKE AN ANGEL . . . but she's a tramp."

         That's when I hit him, my best friend. I thought of Laura and our

         three day honeymoon. I thought of the sting of her full lips, the

         long, lush lines of her warm, wonderful body, her throaty,

         delighted laugh. And I thought of all the nights we were going to

         spend together.

         Paul had stumbled to his feet, and there was blood on his mouth.

         "You need a keeper," he said heavilly and contemptuously. "To save

         you from yourself—and her."




First published 1956 by Dell

          Murder In The Wind is, beyond a doubt, one of the most compelling

         and suspenseful of Macdonald’s novels. . An awesomely described hurricane 

         literally drives his fascinating cast of characters together. Their refuge from the 

           driving wind and rising water become a sort of grand (and grisly) hotel.

         (NOTE:  WEST COAST FLORIDA RESIDENTS SHOULD READ THIS BOOK--

        AND CONDOMINIUM-- EACH SPRING LEST THEY BECOME COMPLACENT....)


   

Lippencott: 1977


Welcome to Golden Sands, the dream condominium built on a weak foundation 

and a thousand dirty secrets. JDM’s powerful novel is a panoramic look at the 

shocking facts of life in a Sun Belt community: the real estate swindles and political

 payoffs, the maintenance charges that run up, and the health benefits that run out,

 the crack-ups and marital breakdowns, the disaster that awaits those who play in

 the path of a hurricane.





  Fawcett: 1953


The smell of stale bedrooms and warm gin hovered over that whole section of town.  the women, even the young girls, walked a certain way.

There was a drifting threat of violence everywhere, and the kids of the neighborhood knew all about knives, garrison belts and bicycle chains long before they were pushed into high school by weary truant officers.


    Fawcett 1968

The best-selling author of the Travis McGee novels tells the riveting tru story of the notorious 

Coppolino murder trial.


Note:  JDM paid tribute to John Pete Zenk who had suggested he write about the trial, and who

 worked  with JDM “all the way” as JDM noted.

In 1996,  as a guest at our 6th John D. MacDonald Conference,  in Sarasota, Florida, we heard a 

very touching story by John Pete Zenk.  The setting was MacDonald’s home, now owned by 

a private party, who invited all conferees to have a barbecue lunch on the verandah.  

Mr. Zenk told us that in 1985, while he was undergoing a very difficult time, both personally and 

medically, and a check for a sizable sum of money appeared out of nowhere--the 

explanation was that it was for some”royalties” long overdue from further sales of the book.  

There was not a dry  eye in the house when Zenk told us that it was not until after JDM’s death 

that he found out that the money was simply given by JDM to Zenk under the “guise” of a

 royalty payment.





         1981 by Harper and Row: 1981

         John D. MacDonald & Captain John H. Kilpack

         FOR CRUISE VETERANS

         FOR ARMCHAIR TRAVELERS

         NOTHING CAN GO WRONG . . . But everything does in this exciting

         tale of the last long cruise of a U.S. passenger ship by superb

         storyteller Captain John H. Kilpack and renowned author John D.

         MacDonald.

         When the S.S. MARISPOSA set sail in 1977 for a 77-day journey from

         San Francisco to Leningrad and back, crazy antics, practical

         jokes, human quirks, and an old ship with more than its share of

         mechanical troubles created a memorable adventure for everyone

         aboard.

         This wild tour takes us twice through the Panama Canal, to more

         than a dozen European ports, to Alaska, and to sultry Caribbean

         isles in a uniquely amusing and entertaining book.





        Fawcett: 1963

         

         Who in the hell did she think she was, plunging into his present

         life, pleading with him to forget his past, promissing him the

         impossible?

         Sid Shanley couldn't stay in one place very long. He had to keep

         on the run, changing towns, changing jobs, changing women. He

         worked out the perfect setup—no attachments, no trails, no

         explanations. But now a girl had caught up with him. Her name was

         Paula—and a million dollars lay behind her strange invitation . .




         Fawcett: 1961

         

         ARCHITECT OF EVIL

         Step by step, Dwight McAran built a wall of vicious hate around

         himself.

         It was easy. He was a man who could slap one woman to death

         because she loved him, and hum a love song to another while he

         raped her.

         Sure, he did some time in jail. He sat in a cell for five long

         years until he harbored a core of stark, steaming evil designed to

         explode in a fury of vengeance.

         Revenge was all he craved—and a plan was what he had—a plan just

         cruel enough to please him, just crazy enough to work.




   Knopf: 1984

         Remember all those televangelist  scandals in the late 80’s ?

        JDM wrote this book years before.....prescient as usual...





Fawcett  1960


SHE WOULD NEVER ESCAPE HER PAST--HER FATE TO BE CAUGHT FOREVER IN THE SICK GLITTER OF THE GREAT SUCKER TRAP.


Coney Island in the desert.  Miami Beach with an ocean. Nothing but sand and neon and money, money, everywhere.  Big-name entertainers rubbing elbows with big name ganGsters over the green-baize craps tables.


Bare-breasted showgirls conning the big spenders in the small hours.  All-night marriage chapels......Little white balls bouncing around all the roulette wheels....


World without end....


VEGAS!!!!







Simon and Schuster:   1959

        

         ART, EROTICA, AND TEQUILA

         When a jaded exponent of the Fast Buck hitches his starload of

         schemes to the salacious bent of a well-heeled, well-oiled

         divorcee, the result is a daffy mail-ordered Mexican art colony

         known as the Cuernavaca Summer Workshop.

         The unique goings-on and comings-off of the members of this

         oddball establishment are the stuff a he-mans dreams are made of.

         It is a positively no-money-back, uninhibited, unabridged romp

         through passion and Picasso, under the naked Mexican sun, where

         East meets West, North meets South, Madison Avenue goes native,

         and the long-stemmed Texas lovelies unveil their astonishing

         natural equipment in the hallowed name of Culture.


(NOTE:  A REALLY  “FUN “ READ)






        Dell: 1957

       

         She was so alive and he needed her so badly there was nothing to

         do but kill her . . .





Lippencott: 1977


Welcome to Golden Sands, the dream condominium built on a weak foundation 

and a thousand dirty secrets. JDM’s powerful novel is a panoramic look at the 

shocking facts of life in a Sun Belt community: the real estate swindles and political

 payoffs, the maintenance charges that run up, and the health benefits that run out,

 the crack-ups and marital breakdowns, the disaster that awaits those who play in

 the path of a hurricane.






Gold Medal: 1971

         

         Contains the following short stories:

         "The Random Noise of Love" "Dear Old Friend" "The Willow Pool"

         "Quarrel" "Woodchuck" "Double Hannenframmis" "The Annex"




         Fawcett:  1960

         

         Beneath the relaxed exterior of their lush beach life, the year

         round sun tans, the unmeasured cocktails, the casual embraces

         there pulses an insistent, blood-warm note of violence, of

         unspeakable desire.

         Before the story is done, the pulse has run wild.



 

DELL:  1958

        HE WANTED OUT.

         Out of his job, out of his marriage to a well-heeled lush. And

         there'd never be another chance like this one.

         A big, big caper, but simple as pie. A suitcase bursting with

         tightly packed stacks of nice, worn, unmarked bills. And nobody

         would get hurt - supposedly.

         But the sight and feel of all that money can warp a man, can make

         him decide not to split it up. And it can make murder look easy.



    Fawcett: 1951

         

         Emily was demure, beautiful. Only she loved money as other women  love men. 

To satisfy her craving, she seduced Kyle Cameron,drained from him his manhood, his 

morals and his soul. . .

(Note:  JDM wished he could have bought all copies of this book so he could burn them...

not his best effort--and  rare to find).




         Fawcett: 1961

         

         A lonely cottage on an empty Florida Key

         An escaped convict

         The woman who took fatal pity on him

         A wealthy man who lives in - retirement

         His alcoholic wife, a prisoner behind drawn blinds

         An ex pro-football player who thought he'd lost his nerve

         A lone girl on a deserted beach



       

         Popular Library: 1956

         

         Clint Sewell knew there wasn't a wife within fifty miles who

         didn't have reason to kill Mary Olan - because there wasn't a

         husband around who didn't think the grass was greener in Mary

         Olan's bedroom. The latest occupant was Clint's boss, a nice guy,

         but not above deceiving his wife - and maybe not above letting

         Clint be the patsy when the fabulous Mary Olan was found dead in a

         closet, with Clint Sewell's belt around her lovely neck.

        

   Published AGAIN IN 1961 AS 

 




       




© CAL  2012