Nameless Detective - Nameless Detective Novels

Nameless Detective Novels

  1. The Snatch, Random House, (1971)
  2. The Vanished, Random House, (1973)
  3. Undercurrent, Random House, (1973)
  4. Blowback, Random House, (1977)
  5. Twospot, (With Collin Wilcox), Putnam, (1978)
  6. Labyrinth, St. Martin's, (1980)
  7. Hoodwink, St. Martin's, (1981)
  8. Scattershot, St. Martin's, (1982)
  9. Dragonfire, St. Martin's, (1982)
  10. Bindlestiff, St. Martin's, (1983)
  11. Casefile (short stories), St. Martin's, (1983)
  12. Quicksilver, St. Martin's, (1984)
  13. Nightshades, St. Martin's, (1984)
  14. Double (With Marcia Muller), St. Martin's, (1984)
  15. Bones, St. Martin's, (1985)
  16. Deadfall, St. Martin's, (1986)
  17. Shackles, St. Martin's, (1988)
  18. Jackpot, Delacorte, (1990)
  19. Breakdown, Delacorte, (1991)
  20. Quarry, Delacorte, (1992)
  21. Epitaphs, Delacorte, (1992)
  22. Demons, Delacorte, (1993)
  23. Hardcase, Delacorte, (1995)
  24. Spadework (short stories), Crippen & Landru, (1996)
  25. Sentinels, Carroll & Graf, (1996)
  26. Illusions, Carroll & Graf, (1997)
  27. Boobytrap, Carroll & Graf, (1998)
  28. Crazybone, Carroll & Graf, (2000)
  29. Bleeders, Carroll & Graf, (2002)
  30. Spook, Carroll & Graf, (2003)
  31. Scenarios (short stories), Forge Books, (2005)
  32. Nightcrawlers, Forge Books, (2005)
  33. Mourners, Forge Books, (2006)
  34. Savages, Forge Books, (2007)
  35. Fever, Forge Books, (2008)
  36. Schemers, Forge Books, (2009)
  37. Betrayers, Forge Books, (2010)
  38. Camouflage, Forge Books, (2011)
  39. Hellbox, Forge Books, (2012)
  40. Kinsmen, (novella), Cemetery Dance Publications, (2012)
  41. Femme, (novella), Cemetery Dance Publications, (2012)
  42. Nemesis, Forge Books, 2013

Read more about this topic:  Nameless Detective

Famous quotes containing the words nameless, detective and/or novels:

    In every great novel, who is the hero all the time? Not any of the characters, but some unnamed and nameless flame behind them all.
    —D.H. (David Herbert)

    Everybody thinks detectives do nothing but ask questions. But detectives have souls the same as anyone else.... You know, Mrs. Beragon, being a detective is like, well, like making an automobile. You just take all the pieces and put them together one by one. First thing you know you’ve got an automobile. Or a murderer.
    Ranald MacDougall (1915–1973)

    The present era grabs everything that was ever written in order to transform it into films, TV programmes, or cartoons. What is essential in a novel is precisely what can only be expressed in a novel, and so every adaptation contains nothing but the non-essential. If a person is still crazy enough to write novels nowadays and wants to protect them, he has to write them in such a way that they cannot be adapted, in other words, in such a way that they cannot be retold.
    Milan Kundera (b. 1929)