Two novels from 1959 and 1960, originally published in paperback by Beacon Books, which explore what some critics have labeled "the sleazy side of the street."
Three spy novels featuring lawyer Manny deWitt, originally published in paperback by Gold Medal Books. The action is light-hearted and the humor a bit twisted in these slight spoofs of the spy genre,
William Ard created many detective heroes in the 1950s including Timothy Dane and Lou Largo. YOU'LL GET YOURS is one of two hardboiled novels featuring Barney Glines. Before he passed away in 1960, Ar
Gil Brewer is one of the modern masters of desperate noir fiction, and this is the first collection of his short stories, expanded to include five stories left out of the original edition.
A new thriller from the author of SMITH. "Former Navy SEAL Hal Morgan, whose external scars mirror his internal wounds, finds a chance at redemption when he stumbles upon Ana, the former mistress
New York City. 1948. Damon Taylor, ace reporter for Crime Weekly, begins to investigate the murder of a dance leader at the Savoy. Soon he is aided by a young Truman Capote and fellow newshound, Walte
Gil Brewer wrote novels of "sweaty desperation," according to author James Reasoner. These are two of his best, written at the peak of Brewer's career.
Lionel White inspired Stanley Kubrick and was referenced by Quentin Tarantino, but his novels have remained out of print for too long. Stark House proudly re-introduces him to a modern audience with t
The Haunts of Men was originally published in 1898. It has been reprinted in full, with the addition of three non-supernatural stories each from The King in Yellow and The Maker of Moons, plus a secti
Ghosts and Shape Shifters Monos and Daimonos by Edward Bulwer Hugenin’s Wife by M. P. Shiel The Far Islands by John Buchan The Ship That Saw a Ghost by Frank Norris The Gray Wolf by George MacDonald T
Volume 3 in the "Collected Weird Fiction of Robert W. Chambers." The first is a somewhat tongue-in-check work, the second a bit more serious, both dealing with romantic episodes with fantast
Two gangland crime novels from an author of whom Bill Pronzini said "had few peers among noir writers of the 50s and 60s; he has few peers today." Or as Ed Gorman phrased it in Mystery Scene
Jess Franco was director, cinematographer, writer, composer, editor, producer and actor in a series of fiercely independent films made over a roughly sixty year range.From B-horror films to hardcore s