Margaret Millar’s An Air that Kills (1957; 2016)

2017-02-24T17:02:31-05:00

Because so many of Margaret Millar's novels consider married couples - often at the point in which the relationship is strained, if not fractured - one wonders about her relationship with Ken Millar (better known as Ross MacDonald, who also wrote mysteries). Did they squabble like Esther and Ron do

Margaret Millar’s An Air that Kills (1957; 2016)2017-02-24T17:02:31-05:00

Margaret Millar’s A Beast in View (1955; 2016)

2017-02-24T17:01:29-05:00

She won the Edgar for it in 1956: Best Novel. (If you are looking for new reading lists, the Edgar Award's site is filled with temptations.) And it was the first of three, later awards being given for The Fiend in 1965 and Beyond This Point Are Monsters in 1971. (She would

Margaret Millar’s A Beast in View (1955; 2016)2017-02-24T17:01:29-05:00

Margaret Millar’s Wives and Lovers (1954; 2016)

2017-07-24T15:00:28-04:00

Readers familiar with Margaret Millar's suspense novels, will immediately recognize her style and language in Wives and Lovers. (Just yesterday I discussed Vanish in an Instant, another volume in the Syndicate reprint series.) "It was a shoebox of a room, with the ceiling pressed down on it like a lid, and

Margaret Millar’s Wives and Lovers (1954; 2016)2017-07-24T15:00:28-04:00

Margaret Millar’s Vanish in an Instant (1952; 2016)

2017-07-24T15:00:38-04:00

Margaret Millar's mysteries are being brought back into print by Soho Syndicate. The Master at Her Zenith volume is comprised of five of her well-known books, including the Edgar-winning Beast in View. Throughout, her interest in psychology is evident. Both she and her characters are fascinated by detail. And the

Margaret Millar’s Vanish in an Instant (1952; 2016)2017-07-24T15:00:38-04:00

The Fourth Nina Borg Mystery: The Considerate Killer

2016-07-21T11:58:13-04:00

“'What the hell makes you think,' she said, in her most glacial voice, 'that I am anybody’s victim?'” Soho Press, 2016 Nina's question, in an earlier volume of the series, is ironic in this context: The Considerate Killer begins with two blows to the back of Nina's head

The Fourth Nina Borg Mystery: The Considerate Killer2016-07-21T11:58:13-04:00
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