Amazon.com
Cathy was the lively one--the bleached-blonde star of the nurses' aides' lunchroom--the one who enjoyed scripting an ever-changing soap opera from the lives of the nursing-home staff. Gwen was the pug-nosed newcomer with a little girl's dependency and desire to please: she doted on Cathy, and was honored to be chosen as her lover. They turned a respected Michigan nursing home into their playground for frivolous games and practical jokes. Then Cathy got worried that Gwen was cheating on her, so she suggested a love pact that would bind them together "forever and five days." Gwen carried out her wishes, and smothered five patients in their beds. It's a story with a large cast of characters--the employees of the nursing home, the individual patients and their loving families, the outsiders who wondered and worried. Lowell Cauffiel does a good job of letting us into their lives, and into the world of make-believe that allowed these murders to go unnoticed for so long.
Customer Reviews:
Now I'll just have to buy it.......2007-03-05
With all the bad reviews and remarks about the grammar and typos... I'll have to go buy the book now. The ones who are putting the book down because of the typos etc., come on.... you still understood what Mr. cauffiel was saying right? These comments make the person want to buy the book to see what the hype is all about. Great job bad reviewers... more sales for Mr. Cauffiel.
Keeps the Reader in Suspense.......2006-11-16
Although it is clear from the start that the two women are responsible for the murders of the nursing home patients, the author does keep back some details until the end. The shifting accounts from witnesses and interviews opens new thinking as the tale unfolds.
I had to really mentally shift gears at the end once all the details were laid out and even then I'm glad I wasn't on the jury.
Some of the incidents cropped up over and over, but I began to realize the different points of views given to each retelling. Sifting out what was real, what was staged, and who was covering for someone makes it a really complex case.
True crime readers will find it worth wading through.
I should know I was there........2005-11-23
Catherine Carpenter, that is how I know Cathy Wood. I know her personally because you see, I am the Debbie/David of her imagination. I am Debbie. Not David. I can tell you from experience, Catherine May Carpenter-Wood probably did the killings herself. One day while driving along in my car, she asked me if I ever wondered what it would feel like to stab someone, and that she wondered how it would feel as the knife cut into their skin. This gave me the creeps and after I dropped her off at her house, I never went back nor saw her again. She knew I was gay, she knew I was a girl and not a boy. I was out of the closet to my parents at the age of 13 and everyone that knew me knew I was gay. Lowell Caufield said in his documentary that he believed that Cathy made up a lot of things to cover up the fact that she was gay. He is right. She covered up the fact of my being a girl to her friends and family so that she would not be further mocked. Being a heavy girl, she got a lot of razzing from others. On my 28th birthday, my girlfriend and I were at the carousel bar. A drink was sent over to my table with a note on it saying "Remember me, Cathy". Of course I had no idea who it was from, it had been so many years later. Soon a large figure stepped in front of me as I was making my way up to the dance floor and it was her. I was in shock to say the least but she was smiling at me with that snear grin of hers as if to say Uh huh its me. She invited my girlfriend and I to her house and gave us directions. She said it was for an after the bar party. I didnt really want to go but my girlfriend said why not and maybe it would wake her up a little bit to be around others. We had to drive back home which was 85 miles north. When my girlfriend and I arrived, there wasnt anyone at home but Cathy herself. She led me down to her basement to "show me photos of her daughter". I believe that if it werent for the fact that I praised and showed admiration over her beautiful little daughter, I would have died in that basement with my girlfriend tired and sleeping out in our car. Gwen entered the house just as I was leaving. She was obviously drunk. She shot grim looks at Cathy and tossed her head in my direction. I saw Cathy shrug her shoulders and I as I looked back on that moment for years I knew that there was something that was suppose to happen in that house that night. I summed all of the nights events up to one thing. 1. No one was there but Cathy when we arrived. 2. Cathy led me to the basement to show me photos of her child. 3. The look that Gwen gave Cathy when she realized that I was still there or rather still alive. 4. The creeped out feeling I had the whole way home and conversed with my sleepy girlfriend about it in the car on the way back. I believe they conspired to kill me that night along with my girlfriend. I also believe that my girlfriend staying in the car to sleep was one part of the deal they hadnt counted on. I consider myself lucky to be alive. After hearing about their arrests on the news almost 4 months later, I knew in my heart that all my feelings about that night were real. Cathy is a brilliant, manipulative mind playing person and I believe that Gwen Graham and her should have switched places as far as sentencing. I dont believe that Gwen is Innocent but I believe with all my heart and soul that Catherine Wood is responsible for more than one of the deaths at Alpine Manor Nursing Home. The mind games she played were only a part of Catherine Wood. She also liked to play with people's lives by making up things about them to see the outcome of it all. I am hoping that the parole board sees through Cathy and decides to let her ride out the 40 years instead of parolling her this year. I can see the lies pour out as I watch her on the documentary. Only those of us who knew Cathy in person could actually tell when she was lying and when she was telling the truth. She tries to look you in the eyes when she speaks to you hoping that you will believe her. She told me that once a long time ago about lying to her parents. I hope that Cathy stays in therepy after her release for the sake of her child, and her family as well as herself. I feel for the families of all her victims. Coincedentally I worked at Alpine Manor for a day in 1984. I was horrified because I saw first hand some abuse that was going on and I immediately quit, but it was nothing as horrific as what these two women carried out. I could say more about this woman and tell you a lot of stories about how as a teenager she manipulated her friends and family, but I'll save it for my novel. Thank you Mr. Caufield for mentioning my telephone call to Ken Kolker in your book. I hope you will write a follow up book about all the mind games Catherine Wood has been playing while in prison. I'm sure she has and it would fill another book.
To the reviewer.......2005-04-27
This book was wonderful! To the reviewer from Australia that was turned off by the book's (grammer) that would be grammar!
Keeps the reader in suspense.......2004-08-04
Although it is clear from the start that the two women are responsible for the murders of the nursing home patients, the author does keep back some details until the end. The shifting accounts from witnesses and interviews opens new thinking as the tale unfolds.
I had to really mentally shift gears at the end once all the details were laid out and even then I'm glad I wasn't on the jury.
Some of the incidents cropped up over and over, but I began to realize the different points of views given to each retelling. Sifting out what was real, what was staged, and who was covering for someone makes it a really complex case.
True crime readers will find it worth wading through.
Average customer rating:
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Death Without Dignity: The Story of the First Nursing Home Corporation Indicted for Murder
Steven Long
Manufacturer: Texas Monthly Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Civil Procedure
| Procedures & Litigation
| Law
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Criminal Law
| Law
| Subjects
| Books
True Crime
| True Accounts
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
Civil Procedure
| Procedures & Litigation
| Law
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Nursing Home Care
| Nursing
| Medical
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0877190623 |
Book Description
For an unlucky member of parliament, a hospital stay is the unkindest cut of all...
When Britain's Home Secretary complained of abdominal pains, it seemed like a simple case of appendicitis. But minutes after his operation, the ill-fated politician lay dead on the table. When Chief Detective-Inspector Roderick Alleyn arrives to dissect the situation, he finds many a likely suspect, including a vengeful surgeon, a lovelorn nurse, an unhappy wife, and a cabinet full of political foes.
Customer Reviews:
Marsh Hits Her Stride.......2005-03-10
Ngaio Marsh is among the great mystery novelists of the 20th Century--but like many another writer she went through an aprentice period. Both A MAN LAY DEAD and ENTER A MURDER were fairly well received when they were published in the early 1930s, but it wasn't until the 1935 publication of THE NURSING HOME MURDER that the reading public began to take notice.
England's Home Secretary is on the eve of both important political watersheds and not a few personal developments when he is suddenly taken ill and rushed into surgery. But what should be a simple operation finds him dead on the table, and at least two two of those in attendance had good reason to wish him out of the picture. Inspector Alleyn has his hands full with doctors, nurses, lawyers and such--and just possibly a political assassin lurking in the background.
This is the first Marsh novel in which Inspector Alleyn truly emerges as a memorable personality--and in which Marsh begins to show her talent for both characterization and setting. The plot is also quite striking, and medical technology aside the novel has a remarkably modern feel. Marsh would go on to do better works, but that doesn't undercut this particular title, which is quite fine. Recommended.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer
Book Description
An accomplished Egyptologist, Carla Day's affectionate-but-confused elderly father now lives in a fusion of past and present at an upscale assisted living facility. Then a string of suspicious events unravels at the home, and Carla, hoping to keep a close eye on her dad, takes a job there. But management has one condition: Spy for us, figure out who's doing this, and you and your father can stay...
Soon, terrible things happen-and Carla's father rambles not only about Egypt, but also about a dead woman on the nearby beach. The answer may lie in an ancient Egyptian tomb. Or maybe it's somewhere further-buried deep in the recesses of a brilliant old man's memory.
Customer Reviews:
Over Rated.......2007-02-07
I purchased this book because it was recommended to me by Amazon. I am usually most pleased with these books, this book is the exception. I had a difficult time getting into to the book. It took almost three months to get to the third chapter, the book was too easy to put down. I found the book to be uninteresting and too disjointed to really enjoy. The characters were poorly developed and there was too much about the past life of the main character that was not explained or else glossed over to make the book seem interesting. All in all I would not recommend this book nor will I invest in what I am sure will be a forthcoming sequel.
intriguing amateur sleuth that condemns nursing home "prisons".......2005-09-07
Carla was working at Susie's health Food Store in Santa Cruz when the Green Brach Manor Nursing Home calls to inform her that her father, a victim of Alzheimer's, had deteriorated and will have to be moved to the "no hope house" for closer managed care. Carla believes her beloved dad, once a renowned Egyptologist, would die in the stifling prison like edifice. She journeys to Berkley to be with him and while there asks for a job as an aide assisting patients with their medicine, etc if her dad can stay in the more independent facility. Administrator Mrs. Sisal hires her.
However, odd occurrences begin to happen at the Green Branch starting with a fire, meds missing, the death of an employee, tampered food, and her father blaming everything on a dead woman at the beach that is either near the home or the Pyramids. Mrs. Sisal demands that Carla, who is very popular amongst the patients, spy on them and the staff to learn who is causing the troubles if she and her father are to stay at Green Branch. Reluctantly she begins spying not realizing the danger she places herself in by doing so.
MURDER NEVER FORGETS combines an intriguing amateur sleuth tale with some Egyptologist elements inside a deep family drama. Readers get a taste of what happens at a nursing home which operates more like a hospital prison than a nurturing of our seniors facility. Thus the story line grips readers on two levels: that of the mystery and that of senior citizen health care; together they blend into a fine contemporary thriller.
Harriet Klausner
Product Description
Multiple books shipped as one item for your convenience. Save on Shipping/Handling charges.
Book Description
Doctors have a special position in society; they are looked up to as healers and trusted friends. This book examines thirteen cases of doctors who have cruelly exploited their privileged position to kill for lust, greed and power.
There are cases of wife murderers, children killers, homicidal mania, flights from justice, poisoners, and elderly victims who willed their physicians all their worldly goods before being murdered.
This is a macabre but highly entertaining examination of the most extreme form of medical malpractice— premeditated murder.
Customer Reviews:
They're supposed to save lives! Not Take Them!.......2007-07-03
This book is missing one key doctor and that is Dr. Harold Shipman of England but they do mention the notorious doctor. The book focuses on doctors who kill their spouses, children, lovers, and of course, the patients. There are variety of doctors written about in this book that do get my attention like the Italian American doctor who is found guilty of killing his wife and his mistress' husband. Of course, the mistress doesn't go away quietly and she testifies against him after he dumps her for another woman. This book is really an anthology of doctors who commit murders. One doctor kills both of his own sons for insurance money was the one that made me angry the most. One doctor gains a taste for murdering his patients in America and in Africa unbeknownst to the authorities over there that he was practicing medicine. It's an okay book with some pictures of the doctors who look more like criminals than doctors themselves. I believe almost all the doctors written about it in this book are male. If you are true crime reader like myself, you'll find this book interesting.
Average customer rating:
- A great tale, keeps the reader on the edge of their seat
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Murder at Sunset
J. McGrath
Manufacturer: Spiralbound Editions
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Spiral-bound
Women Sleuths
| Mystery
| Mystery & Thrillers
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0971607206 |
Book Description
With her hair still wrapped for bed, Maggie Goss hurries into the West wing of "Sunset Home" to find out what the commotion was about. She is startled to find her nephew Chief of Police, Sam Goss, interviewing the staff. He confirms that her friend and bridge club companion of over 40 years, Mary Spencer, had been murdered. Shocked that such a murder could take place in the little town of Belhaven Mississippi, Maggie is drawn into the hunt, however, not without paying a terrible price. Her twin sister, Maude, a resident of Sunset, is murdered as well as the children and mother of Helen Washington, Maude's private nurse. Instead of being devastated, Maggie's resolve is stiffened, and she, with Helen's help, goes on to solve this tangled crime.
Customer Reviews:
A great tale, keeps the reader on the edge of their seat.......2004-08-05
J. McGrath hails from a small town in Mississippi. Like many writers, he uses his depression-era childhood memories to good effect in his first novel of a small town. Mr. McGrath has more than twenty years experience writing articles for periodicals. His second Maggie Goss mystery is due out later this year and is called MYSTERIOUS VALLEY.
Maggie and Maude Goss share a temporary living arrangement in Sunset Extended Care home, while Maude recovers from a stroke. Having recently sold their business, Maggie is at loose ends until their friend Mary Spencer is found murdered in the nursing home. Suspicion almost immediately falls on her spoiled and nasty son Harvey, and Maggie find new purpose in assisting her nephew, Sam, in the investigation. Sam thinks Maggie should learn to shoot, and to his delight and surprise Maggie is what he terms a "natural." He pushes Maggie to carry a gun in her purse, and no sooner is the ink on the permit dry when Maggie surprises a hit squad in her very own home, but not before they murder her beloved twin Maude:
"Maude let out a distorted, gurgling cry, which knifed into Maggie's soul. There was another flash with the same spitting sound and Maude's cry abruptly ended. Finding the courage, Maggie ran toward her sister's door, pushing it open with her gun at the ready, and started firing at the flashlight beam."
There has never been a better time to be a mystery enthusiast. New writers with oodles of talent are popping out everywhere, and J. McGrath is finding a place among the ranks of new writers. Maggie Goss and her nephew Sam make a fine investigative team and are caring relatives. McGrath rounds out his characters nicely, even giving the bad guys human qualities which the reader can relate to, creating even more layers to his murder. Maggie has fine investigative instincts, and can be irascible at times, which makes her all the more lovable. The F.B.I involvement is also developed to a nice degree, with hints of further adventures for Maggie. This is a fine first effort from a man with experience, tact, and a shrewd understanding of human nature. A great tale which keeps the reader on the edge of their seat!
Shelley Glodowski
Senior Reviewer
Amazon.com
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror annuals are always a treat; read this one and The Year's Best Science Fiction Sixteenth Annual Collection edited by Gardner Dozois and you'll have a fairly complete overview of speculative fiction from 1998 as well as hours of great reading.
Datlow and Windling, renowned for crossing genre boundaries, gather stories and poems from mainstream magazines, literary journals, and Internet zines. There are vampires, a Lovecraft homage, enchanted birds and animals, shapeshifters, adult fairy tales, ghosts, and even a hunted muse. The best are Byatt's sensuous, enchanting "Cold"--about an ice princess who marries a glass-blowing desert prince--and Straub's novella, "Mr. Clubb and Mr. Cuff" (which won the Stoker award for Best Long Fiction in 1999), a black comedy of revenge gone awry. The reference material includes each editor's review of the year's best novels, collections and anthologies, magazines, related nonfiction, children's books, and art. There's also a roundup of 1998's film, television, and dramatic offerings by Ed Bryant, a brief essay on comics by Seth Johnson, and obituaries by James Frenkel.
It's an invaluable source of introductions to authors you might not otherwise try, plus thought-provoking observations on fantasy in all its guises. You may not get to a convention this year, but if you've read Datlow and Windling, you'll know what a good one is like. --Nona Vero
Book Description
Over 250,000 words of the finest fantasy and horrorA. S. ByattCharles de LintKaren Joy FowlerNeil GaimanLisa GoldsteinStephen KingEllen KushnerPatricia A. McKillipSteven MillhauserMichael Marshall SmithPeter StraubJane YolenFor more than a decade, readers have looked to The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror to showcase the highest achievements of fantastic fiction. Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling continue their critically acclaimed and award-winning tradition with another stunning collection of stories. The fiction and poetry here is culled from an exhaustive survey of the field, nearly four dozen stories ranging from fairy tales to gothic horror, from magical realism to dark tales in the Grand Guignol style. Rounding out the volume are the editors' invaluable overviews of the year in fantastic fiction, and a long list of Honorable Mentions, making this volume a valubale reference source as well as the best reading available in fantasy and horror
Customer Reviews:
A mix of diamonds and duds.......2003-07-07
I was really impressed with some of the fiction in this book. I really loved the stories Travels with the Snow Queen and Quiting Loup. I also loved Twa Corbies. But some were a little bit to be desired. I really thought that the whole feminist fairy tale theme was a little bit hard to swallow and a tad annoying but overall a good read.
Some Great Stories Make Up For the MANY Duds...........2003-01-17
This is actually one of the better "Years Best" that I've read so far. Again, I skimmed right past Windling & Datlow's Summations- They go on waaayyyy too long, as usual. Also as usual, Fantasy Editor Terri Windling monopolizes the bulk of the book with her choices. Horror Editor Ellen Datlow does get some payback, though: One of her choices, Peter Straub's "Mr. Clubb and Mr. Cuff", runs in excess of 50 pages. The titular duo is memorable, but the story goes on too long, and the style it's written in is difficult to stick with. The end is worth it, though.
The book opens with Kelly Link's "Travels With the Snow Queen" which I couldn't even finish; I hated it. Link appears again towards the end of the book with "The Specialist's Hat", an absolutely chilling ghost story with a drop-dead scary ending. I couldn't move on to the next story until the next day, because I was turning Link's story over in my mind all night. It was absolutely one of the spookiest stories I've ever read. Sara Douglass offers up the REAL secret behind those Gargoyles on Church roofs in "The Evil Within", a far-fetched but fun Horror tale, and Lisa Goldstein's "The Fantasma of Q____" is an interesting victorian tale with an neat twist at the end. Stephen King's contribution is pretty good; Not his best, but the end makes it worthwhile. One of the book's better tales is Terry Lamsley's "Suburban Blight", where an abandoned building hides a terrifying secret. "Inside the Cackle Factory", by Dennis Etchison, tells us just what happens to all of those washed-up stars we never see on TV anymore. John Kessel's "Every Angel is Terrifying" is a realistic story of escaped killers that takes a mildly fantastic twist at the end; It's extremely well-written, and creepy as hell. As always, there's a Dracula story (Sort of)- It's Mark W. Tiedmann's "Psyche", and it's a keeper. Drac himself is only peripherally involved, but his influence permeates the entire story. Jane Yolen, Norman Partridge, and Michael Blumlein all contribute interesting stories as well. I couldn't get through Christopher Harman's "Jackdaw Jack"- It was just awful. There's another Charles De Lint Newford story, which is excellent as usual, and Terry Dowling's story, "Jenny Come To Play" is just a nasty read; Although they're nothing alike, it has the same feel as "The Silence of the Lambs". And as usual, Terri Windling monopolizes the end of the book with dud stories that I can't get through. Windling tends to favor feminist fantasy stories that are all too much alike; I was actually offended by Carol Ann Duffy's ode to man-hating, "Mrs. Beast"; The less I say about this trash the better. If a man had written such an anti-female story, he'd be finished.
As I said, there are some GREAT stories here, but they're outweighed by the duds, and when one of these stories are bad, they're BAD. I'll read the other two volumes of "Year's Best" that I own, but I'll pass on buying new ones. Windling & Datlow's selections leave a lot to be desired, and I wish they would get a little more daring.....
The current pulse of nonrealistic fiction........2002-06-28
In their twelfth annual survey, Datlow and Windling have assembled a rewarding collection of genre (and extra-genre) fiction from English language sources of all kinds from 1998, with a little poetry thrown in as well. In a format based on Dozois's science fiction anthologies, Datlow and Windling's series has become an annual "event" for lovers of nonrealistic short fiction. The editors are open to just about anything and everything, as long as it has significant fantasy or horror elements, but they are more likely to reprint material by women writers, or about female characters. As far as biases go, that's not a bad one to have: some of the best fantasists working today are women.
The editors look at mainstream magazines like "The New Yorker" and "Ms." -- both of which had strong stories chosen for this book. From "The New Yorker" they selected Stephen King's "That Feeling, You Can Only Say What It Is in French," which in 20 tightly-written pages gives the reader the entire life of a woman who may be getting precognitive flashes about the crash of the plane she and her husband are on, or who may simply be fantasizing the crash as a death wish. I knew this woman completely by the end of the story (whose title refers to déjà vu). The "Ms." story was Lisa Goldstein's "The Phantasma of Q-----," with a moment of magic realism passing so quickly it's hard to catch. It is a strength of this series that it covers work in mainstream, genre and academic/small press sources.
A number of British and Australian magazines, anthologies and collections provide selections, with two superior tales well worth reading. The best thing in the book (and saved for last) is the superb modern fairy tale by A. S. Byatt, "Cold" -- sitting in a warm library, I was shivering at the frozen world depicted. A beautifully textured story, the best I've read in several years. It came from Byatt's collection, "Fire and Ice." Christopher Harman's "Jackdaw Jack" (from Ghosts and Scholars, a UK little magazine) is the best shocker in the anthology. Its pieces fall into place like a well-wrought jigsaw, and the end left me numb.
Among the other stories is an unclassifiable gem by Ray Vukcevich, "By the Time We Get to Uranus" (from the anthology, Imagination Fully Dilated). In the story's surreal world, a person's body slowly develops an astronaut's suit from the feet up, and eventually the person floats off into space. When this happens to a man's wife, he's concerned that his suit isn't developing as fast as hers, as they can't leave together. A metaphor for what separates the sexes these days, the story works and then some.
The stories I detailed here are my favorites, but others will find others they like as much or better. Some motifs of the book are hispanic magic realism, foreign fantasy in translation, and stories that are just very strange. I'm not a fast reader, and this long book took me a year and a half to finish. The extensive prefaces (in roman numerals) run over 100 pages before you even get to "page 1." Windling first documents fantasy for 1998; Datlow then does the same for horror, after which we get essays on the media, comics and obituaries for 1998. The prefaces are meant to be references more than essays, and I do use them as a reference, but they are slow going just to read (and some of the info is duplicated by approaching the genres separately). The shortlist of "honorable mention" stories at the end is also useful as a reference.
All in all, a class act by two dedicated anthologists who deeply care about the state of the contemporary nonrealistic story.
Year's Best Fantasy and Horror, Fifth Annual.......2001-12-12
Standout stories here are Holdstock and Kilworth's chilling "The Ragthorn", Cherryh's "Gwydion and the Dragon" and McGrath's gruesome "The Smell". Also worth mentioning are stories by Koja and Kushner, among others. There's the usual useful overview of the industry, and the usual stock of cutesy (De Lint) and nonsensical stories and bad free verse, but this edition contains more truly good work than many of the others.
An outstanding entry in an excellent series.......2000-11-20
I am working my way back through all of the Datlow/Windling annuals, and although I love all of them, this collection is definitely outshines some of its colleagues (such as the third edition, which is the least thrilling of the ones I have read so far). Many of the stories will cling to your memory, and the scope of genres is commendable. The editors have found works form many different countries and languages and brought them all together into a very good volume. My favorite entries include "The Ragthorn" a truly frightening story about scholarship, information and resurrection; "Our Lady of the Harbour" Charles de Lint's Newford version of the little Mermaid; "Call Home" a truly scary story about a little girl and the man who doesn't molest her; "At the End of the Day" a disturbing and surreal narrative about endings; "The Poisoned Story" an upside down retelling of Cinderella in Puerto Rico by my compatriot Rosario Ferre; "The Peony Lantern" a Japanese ghost story and "The Witch of Wilton Falls" about human monsters and adapting to unusual circumstances. If you have read other Datlow/Windling anthologies and you want to buy other ones, get this one first. If you have never read these anthologies, this is a great place to start.
Books:
- Four and Twenty Blackbirds
- From Here to Paternity (Jane Jeffry Mystery Series #6)
- Germanicus Mosaic (Libertus Mystery Series)
- Grayson
- Hell Hath No Fury: A True Story of Wealth and Passion, Love and Envy, and a Woman Driven to the Ultimate Revenge (St. Martin's True Crime Library)
- History: Fiction or Science? (Chronology, No. 1)
- History: Fiction or Science? (Chronology, No. 1)
- History: Fiction or Science? (Chronology, No. 1)
- Hornblower and the "Hotspur" (Hornblower Series)
- Hornet's Nest
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