Title: A Study in Terror
Title Record # 1320644
Authors: Frederic Dannay and Paul W. Fairman and Manfred Bennington Lee
Date: 1966-00-00
Type: NOVEL [novelization] [non-genre]
Webpages: Blogspot, queen.spaceports.com, Wikipedia-EN
Language: English
Current Tags: None Add Tags
Authors: Frederic Dannay and Paul W. Fairman and Manfred Bennington Lee
Date: 1966-00-00
Type: NOVEL [novelization] [non-genre]
Webpages: Blogspot, queen.spaceports.com, Wikipedia-EN
Language: English
Note: Locus1 and Wikipedia claim that this "Ellery Queen" novel was written by Frederic Dannay & Manfred Bennington Lee. The website The Paperback Film Projector claims that, according to Francis M. Nevins, the author of "Royal Bloodline: Ellery Queen, Author and Detective", Paul W. Fairman wrote the Holmes chapters while Lee and Dannay did the framing story.
Synopsis: A novelization of "A Study in Terror". Ellery Queen reads a previously unknown Watson manuscript and comes up with a different theory of who Jack the Ripper was.
User Rating:
This title has no votes.
VOTE
Current Tags: None Add Tags
Other Titles
Variant Titles | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Publications
Displaying all variants and translations • Do not display translations • Do not display variants or translations
Title | Date | Author/Editor | Publisher/Pub. Series | ISBN/Catalog ID | Price | Pages | Format | Type | Cover Artist | Verif |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Red Jack | 1988-12-00 | ed. Martin H. Greenberg, Frank D. McSherry, Jr., Charles G. Waugh | DAW Books (DAW Collectors #766) | 0-88677-315-6 | $3.95?$: US dollar |
333 | pb?Paperback. Typically 7" by 4.25" (18 cm by 11 cm) or smaller, though trimming errors can cause them to sometimes be slightly (less than 1/4 extra inch) taller or wider/deeper. |
anth | J. K. Potter | |
Jack the Ripper | 2004-08-00 | ed. Martin H. Greenberg, Frank D. McSherry, Jr., Charles G. Waugh | ibooks | 0-7434-9313-3 | $6.99?$: US dollar |
333 | pb?Paperback. Typically 7" by 4.25" (18 cm by 11 cm) or smaller, though trimming errors can cause them to sometimes be slightly (less than 1/4 extra inch) taller or wider/deeper. |
anth | Phil Zimelman |