Joseph Hilton Smyth

Joseph Hilton Smyth

Joseph Hilton Smyth (1901-1972) was convicted in 1942 of acting as an agent of the Japanese government and was sentenced to seven years in prison. After his release, he wrote several novels (some as “Joseph Hilton,” “Hilton Smith,” and “Anonymous”) including The Sex Probers and The Nuder Gender, and edited the Saturday Review of Literature. 

 

Books by Joseph Hilton Smyth

That French Girl

That French Girl

Marie Courcel arrives in Paris with nothing but a farm girl’s stubbornness and a desperate need to reinvent herself. She finds work, learns fast, and discovers how charm, discipline, and intelligence can open doors that once seemed locked forever. By the time an American businessman crosses her path, Marie has become a woman who knows exactly what she wants—and what she’ll never return to...

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President’s Agent

President's Agent

His name is Bart Gould. The President’s private spy. And he’s plunging into Caribbean waters raging with desire, treachery, and death.

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I, Mobster

I, Mobster

"I, Mobster" rips open the dark heart of the American Dream—where loyalty is a racket, love is a setup, and the only way out is in a coffin.

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