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And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery Book

And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery
And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery, Within the formulas of crime fiction, this collection ranges from writers Daphne du Maurier and Margery Allingham, whose names are synonymous with conventional subgenres of crime fiction, through Patricia Highsmith, and Shirley Jackson, who deliberately s, And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery has a rating of 4 stars
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And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery, Within the formulas of crime fiction, this collection ranges from writers Daphne du Maurier and Margery Allingham, whose names are synonymous with conventional subgenres of crime fiction, through Patricia Highsmith, and Shirley Jackson, who deliberately s, And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery
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  • And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery
  • Written by author Jane S. Bakerman
  • Published by University of Wisconsin Press, May 1985
  • Within the formulas of crime fiction, this collection ranges from writers Daphne du Maurier and Margery Allingham, whose names are synonymous with conventional subgenres of crime fiction, through Patricia Highsmith, and Shirley Jackson, who deliberately s
  • Within the formulas of crime fiction, this collection ranges from writers Daphne du Maurier and Margery Allingham, whose names are synonymous with conventional subgenres of crime fiction, through Patricia Highsmith, and Shirley Jackson, who deliberately s
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Within the formulas of crime fiction, this collection ranges from writers Daphne du Maurier and Margery Allingham, whose names are synonymous with conventional subgenres of crime fiction, through Patricia Highsmith, and Shirley Jackson, who deliberately set conventions aside or who moved those conventions into other realms. Most important, perhaps, Jackson, Highsmith and E. X. Ferrars depict civilizations that are not essentially orderly, that are not founded upon a commonly understood concept of justice—where one must make her own order.


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And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery, Within the formulas of crime fiction, this collection ranges from writers Daphne du Maurier and Margery Allingham, whose names are synonymous with conventional subgenres of crime fiction, through Patricia Highsmith, and Shirley Jackson, who deliberately s, And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery

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And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery, Within the formulas of crime fiction, this collection ranges from writers Daphne du Maurier and Margery Allingham, whose names are synonymous with conventional subgenres of crime fiction, through Patricia Highsmith, and Shirley Jackson, who deliberately s, And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery

And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery

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And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery, Within the formulas of crime fiction, this collection ranges from writers Daphne du Maurier and Margery Allingham, whose names are synonymous with conventional subgenres of crime fiction, through Patricia Highsmith, and Shirley Jackson, who deliberately s, And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery

And Then There Were Nine: More Women of Mystery

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