For Studios use the links starting at the next-to-last entry under Publishers ((AU) - to - Koala).
For Setting List use the links starting at the third-from-last entry under Series List (11 B.C. - to - 1912).
ANDERSON, JAMES
The Affair of the Mutilated Mink Coat. Also published as: The Affair
of the Mutilated Mink. Poisoned Press pb, 1999
CARROLL, (CHARLES) MIKE
The Adventure of the Glorious Scot, with Wanda Dow, Culver Dow,
Neil Harvey, Caroline Everett and Jeffrey Dow. Pleasant Places pb
(Fla.), 1999 (A short Sherlock Holmes pastiche.)
CLOWES, DANIEL (GILLESPIE). 1961- .
The Official Lloyd Llewellyn Collection. Fantagraphics pb, 1989
(Collection of comic strips.)
(John Herrington, a librarian in England, has been a
most helpful and reliable source of new information, and he sent
this one in recently.)
COOK, BRUCE. 1932-2003. Writers unfortunately keep dying; here's
one of the most recent.
CUNNINGHAM, CATHY
Curse of Valkyrie House. CFIV shows this byline to be the pseudonym
of Chet Cunningham, but (as confirmed by Chet) this title was actually
written by Chet's son Scott Cunningham, 1956-1993, q.v.)
DOW, JEFFREY
A Case of Hide 'n' Tea, with Carl Heifetz, Wanda Dow, Bob Ennis and
Peter Calamai. Pleasant Places pb (Fla.), 1994 (A short Sherlock
Holmes pastiche.) (The Pleasant Places of Florida, a Sherlockian
scion society, has produced 15 round-robin pastiches over the years,
only some of which got into CFIV. Thanks to Carl Heifetz, the rest
can now be added--see also above and below. Keeping track of the massive
outpouring of Sherlockian pastiches and parodies is a near-impossible task.
Ronald B. De Waal's massive Sherlockian bibliography has been very
helpful, but that only goes into the early 1990s, and De Waal has subsequently
retired from the bibliographic field without a known--at least to me--successor.
CFIV records Sherlockian material under some 288 bylines!)
EDSON, J(OHN) T(HOMAS). Edson is primarily a western writer, and
westerns have always been a bit of a challenge. They're almost always
crime stories, but at least those set in the historic (say, pre-1900)
American west seem to be a defined, separate genre. I've included a
few when detection appeared paramount, or the books were set at the
time of writing. But thanks to input from British book dealer Jamie
Sturgeon (a wonderful bibliographic source in recent years), I became
aware that some of Edson's westerns have contemporary or at least 20th
century settings. There's the Company Z (Texas Rangers) series,
featuring Sgt. Alvin Dustine (later known as Cap Fog)
(= AD), set in 1920s Texas, and with its connections to an Edgar
Wallace character; there's also the Rockabye County series (= RC), usually
set in contemporary Texas and featuring Deputy Alice Fayde (= AF) and
partner Deputy Sheriff Bradford Counter. And, as indicated below,
Fayde and a Company Z character also turn up in Edson's
short story collections. Other SC: Martha (Calamity Jane) Canary = MC;
Amanda Tweedle = AT; Rita Yarborough (of Company Z) = RY.
Alvin Fog, Texas Ranger; see You're a Texas Ranger, Alvin Fog
Bad Hombre. Corgi, 1971 RC
Cap Fog, Texas Ranger, Meet Mr. J. G. Reeder. Corgi, 1977 [1928]
The Deputies. Corgi, 1969 RC
J.T.'s Ladies. Corgi, 1980 ss: The Butcher's Fiery End\A Contract for Alice
Fayde (AF)\Death to Simba Nyeuse\Fifteen, the Hard Way (AT)\It's Our
Turn to Improvise, Miss Blaze\Mrs. Wild Bill (MC)
J.T.'s Ladies Ride Again. Corgi, 1989 ss: All Done Without Deductive Reasoning
(AF)\A Case of Blackmail (AT)\The Deadly Dreams (RY)\Draw Poker's Such
a Simple Game (MC)
The Justice of Company Z. Corgi, 1980; Dell, 1991 AD [1923]
The Lawman of Rockabye County. Corgi, 1982 RC
More J.T.'s Ladies. Corgi, 1987 ss: Accident--or Murder?\Behind a Locked
and Bolted Door (RY)\No Man About the House (AF)\To Separate
Innocence from Guilt
The 1/4 Second Draw. Corgi, 1969 RC
The Owlhoot. Corgi, 1970 RC
Point of Contact. Corgi, 1970 RC
The Professional Killers. Corgi, 1968 RC
Rapido Clint. Corgi, 1980; Dell, 1981 AD [1924]
The Return of Rapido Clint and Mr. J. G. Reeder. Corgi, 1984 [1928]
Run for the Border. Corgi, 1971 RC [Mex.]
The Sheriff of Rockabye County. Corgi, 1981 RC
The Sixteen Dollar Shooter. Corgi, 1974 RC
You're a Texas Ranger, Alvin Fog. Corgi, 1979. U.S. title: Alvin Fog, Texas
Ranger. Dell, 1991 AD [1922]
LANIER, VIRGINIA. 1930-2003.
LIVINGSTON, NANCY. Pseudonym of Jane Woolsey Foster.
MARSHALL, LESLIE
The Case of the Foreign Cabman, with Joy Mitchell, Tom Mitchell, Tom Reesor,
Wanda Butts and Paul Gunning. Pleasant Places pb (Fla.), 1975 (A short
Sherlock Holmes pastiche.)
The Case of the Lost L's, with Mike Carroll, Marvin Norton, Charles Saunders
and Harry Seigrist. Pleasant Places pb (Fla.), 1976 (A short Sherlock Holmes
pastiche.)
RAPP, STEPHANIE
The Adventure of the Pale Ontologist, with George Tullis, John Fought, David
McCallister and Caroline Everett. Pleasant Places pb (Fla.), 1987
(A short Sherlock Holmes pastiche.)
ST. JOHN-LOE, GLADYS
Dust of the Dawn and other stories. Duckworth, 1922 ss (with some crime):
Burning Ghats\By Proxy\Checkmate on 'Change\Dust of the Dawn\Good
for the Soul\Little Ironies\Loaded Dice\The Monster\The Water-Wheel\The
Web of the Past\When the Gods Mock (John Eggeling of Todmorden Books
in England and his e-mailed book lists, and his willingness to supplement lists
with, as here, story title information, have been a great bibliographic help for
several years.)
TAKACH, TOM
The Case of the Yule Lantern Lost, with Caroline Everett, Carl Heifetz, Dave
Scott and Robert Hahn. Pleasant Places pb (Fla.), 1998 (A short Sherlock
Holmes pastiche.)
VALDEZ, PAUL. All titles are about 34 pp.
The Corpse Sat Up. Transport pb (Syd.), 1951 (Although Valdez is given in
CFIV as a Alan Geoffrey Yates pseudonym, this title was apparently written
by Raymond Glenning.)
WOOD, BEN
The Bourbon Bullion Bafflement, with Mike Carroll, Mike Bryan, Neil Harvey,
Caroline Everett and Wanda Dow. Pleasant Places pb (Fla.), 1996
(A short Sherlock Holmes pastiche.)
The Sound of Basket Hills, with Tom Takach, Caroline Everett, Mike Carroll
and Wanda Butts. Pleasant Places pb (Fla.), 1994 (A short Sherlock
Holmes pastiche.)