Midnight Plays anthologizes four plays from four different worlds of story-telling.
John A. Broussard's Murder at Milltown Junior College is packed to the last page with murder.
In Necessary Evils, Hal, an L. A. cop driven to avenge the murder of his three partners, himself blindfolded.
When Matt Carlsberg is found dead in a cottage on Connor Beach, the police must find not only who killed him, but why.
Written in 1919, George Bernard Shaw's Heartbreak House is equal parts tragedy and comedy.
Inspired by a children's geography primer, The Arrow Book of States, Starkey's Book of States was conceived in response as a contemporary poetic atlas.
The Boy Who Said No is first and foremost a story of people and their travails.
Violence and sex in a small Southern city. Arkie, Clemmie, Oxie, and Johns are linked by a schoolboy.
The Saga of Rifka and Herschel begins in South Africa where Herschel Haverman joins the Frankel family.
Dagny Taggart Jamison is a private investigator born on the day.
With this novel, the author of Inquest and Executive Action has managed fiction-created-from-fact.
From the author: I find the small acts within my observation interesting enough to merit writing.
Throne of Straw has been performed in: Los Angeles at UCLA's MacGowan Hall, the Odyssey Theater.
The Fairy Books, or Coloured Fairy Books is a collection of fairy tales divided into twelve books, each associated with a different colour.
It was in the year 1869 that impressed with the degree in which, even during the last twenty years, when the world seemed wholly occupied with other matters.
First published in 1886, The Bostonians is one of James' wittiest social satires.
The House on the Borderland is a supernatural horror novel by William Hope Hodgson.
Dead Souls is a socially critical black comedy.
James Weldon Johnson's The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man is the fictional account of the life of a young American man in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.
The Sheik is a book by Edith Maude Hull, an English novelist of the early twentieth century.