Black Cat Weekly #6

Black Cat Weekly #6

by Edwin BalmerDashiell Hammett Barb Goffman and others
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 11/10/2021

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Black Cat Weekly #6 features an eclectic mix of original, classic, and rare stories and novels—science fiction, mysteries, fantasy (light and dark), and the uncategorizable. The latest issue is no exception. Here are 2 novels and 10 shorter works:


MR. BIG NOSE, by Martin Suto [mystery short]


THE PASSING OF BIG MAMA MAYHALL, by Bobbi A. Chukran [mystery short]


ONE HOUR, by Dashiell Hammett [mystery short]


IT’S A DATE, by Hal Charles [mystery short]


KEEBAN, by Edwin Balmer [mystery novel]


WISHFUL THINKING, by Barb Goffman [suspense/fantasy short]


MYSTERY OF THE SILVER SKULL, by Frank Lovell Nelson [mystery short]


JEMIMA, by A. R. Morlan [science fiction short]


MAN-SIZE IN MARBLE, by E. Nesbit [fantasy short]


SYMPATHY FOR ZOMBIES, by John Gregory Betancourt [science fiction short]


HOLY CITY OF MARS, by Ralph Milne Farley [science fiction short]


PLANET OF DREAD, by Dwight V. Swain [science novel]

ISBN:
9781479463121
9781479463121
Category:
Short stories
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
11-10-2021
Language:
English
Publisher:
Wildside Press
E. Nesbit

Edith Nesbit was born in 1858. Her father died when she was only three and so her family moved all over England. Poverty was something she had known first hand, both as a child and as a young married woman with small children. Like the Railway Childrens' Mother, she was forced to try and sell her stories and poems to editors.

Her first children's book, The Treasure Seekers, was published in 1899. She also wrote Five Children and It but her most famous story is The Railway Children which was first published in 1905 and it hasn't been out of print since.

Edith Nesbit was a lady ahead of her time - she cut her hair short, which was considered a very bold move in Victorian times, and she was a founding member of a group that worked towards improvements in politics and society called The Fabian Society. She died in 1924.

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