Twenty-five classic pulp-noir novels from the paperback era—hard, fast, and unsentimental. Crime, sex, obsession, and desperation collide in stories that defined the raw edge of mid-century noir fiction. Collected here in one massive, 5000 page volume.Best Pulp Noir Fiction Super Pack #7: 25 Hard-boiled Novels By Alfred B. Glaser/Bonnie Golightly/Don Smith/Jack Matcha/Jim Layne/John B. Thompson/Joseph Hilton Smyth/Morton Cooper/Stuart Friedman/Ted Stratton/Terry Spain/Tiffany Thayer/Vechel Howard
Twenty-five classic pulp-noir novels from the paperback era—hard, fast, and unsentimental. Crime, sex, obsession, and desperation collide in stories that defined the raw edge of mid-century noir fiction. Collected here in one massive, 5000 page volume.
Twelve sexy novels from the 1950s and early 1960s, out of print for decades and now collected in one MASSIVE volume.
Twenty-five classic pulp-noir novels from the paperback era—hard, fast, and unsentimental. Crime, sex, obsession, and desperation collide in stories that defined the raw edge of mid-century noir fiction. Collected here in one massive volume.
Twelve sexy novels from the 1950s and early 1960s, out of print for decades and now collected in one volume.
This break-out crime novel, originally published in 1930 under pseudonym "John Doe," was actually written by Tiffany Thayer, who hit the national bestseller lists that same year with his acclaimed novel Thirteen Men, which was quickly followed with one controversial book after another. Now Eyewitness! is finally back in print for the first time in 95 years and hasn't lost its explosive punch.
An unconventional crime story that became a massive bestseller in the 1930s...launching Tiffany Thayer's controversial, and highly successful, writing a career, one that's all but forgotten today, even though he sold millions of books. Now, after nearly 100 years, the blockbuster Thirteen Men is finally back in print...and hasn't lost any of its narrative power over time. It is still, as the San Francisco Examiner declared, “One of the most realistic studies of the American melting pot that has ever been penned.”