Thursday, May 15, 2025

The Hitchcock Project-Self Defense by John T. Kelley [6.32]

by Jack Seabrook

One evening, a car pulls up outside a liquor store in a run-down part of town. A tall, handsome man emerges from the car and walks between a few battered garbage cans to the store's front door. On entering, he cheerfully greets the middle-aged woman behind the counter; she appears frightened. He pulls a six-pack of beer from a refrigerated case, approaches the counter, and places a five-dollar bill in front of the clerk, who tells him that she has no change and suggests that he "'take the beer and pay me later.'"

From behind the store's open front door, a young man with a gun emerges and walks toward the customer, whose back is to the young man. The gunman is reflected in a mirror on the wall behind the clerk. Suddenly, the sweaty, nervous gunman sticks his gun in the customer's back and tells him not to turn around. The clerk urges the young man to leave, since he has her money, and he rushes out the front door, pulling it closed. The customer, sweating profusely and looking upset, watches as the clerk takes her husband's gun from behind the counter; she says that she was afraid to reach for it before. She places the gun on the counter and the customer grabs it and runs out to the parking lot, where he shoots at the thief's car as it starts to drive away. After a second gunshot, the car stops. The customer approaches the car and shoots twice more, aiming at the driver. Going up to the car, he sees the young man slumped over the wheel.

Audrey Totter as Mrs. Phillips
This is the powerful scene that opens "Self Defense," an episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents that aired on NBC on Tuesday, May 23, 1961. The scene dissolves to the office of police Lt. Schwartz, where the liquor store customer speaks to Schwartz and another policeman named Lou. The man identifies himself as Gerald R. Clarke, single, age 38, who works as a radio engineer at a local station. Clarke asks about the young man, who is identified as 18-year-old Jimmy Phillips; he is badly injured but alive and has no prior criminal record. The second policeman explains that Jimmy's mother is divorced and works as a switchboard operator, while his father is remarried and lives somewhere in New Jersey.

George Nader as Gerald Clarke
When questioned, Clarke explains that he had never been to that liquor store before but had stopped off there to buy beer while on his way to a friend's house to play cards. Schwartz praises him for having "'showed a lot of nerve going after that kid'" and asks Clarke why he took the risk. Clarke replies, "'Because he pointed his gun at me,'" and tells a story about having served in the Army during WWII in France, Belgium, and Germany. He was never on the line and never had to kill anyone, but he once saw a British soldier shot by mistake by a friend outside a bar in Brussels. "'It made me realize how special a loaded gun is when it's pointed at you.'" When Jimmy pointed his gun at Clarke, the ex-soldier thought, "'What makes him think that he can do this to me? And I had to fight back.'" Schwartz tells Clarke that he can leave and Clarke remarks, "'I wish it hadn't happened.'" "'Don't let it throw you,'" says Schwartz, "'A man's got a right to defend himself.'"

Steve Gravers as Lt. Schwartz
Clarke leaves the lieutenant's office and enters a phone booth in the lobby of the police station. While he's inside, a policeman brings a middle-aged woman into the lobby, where she sits on a bench. Clarke emerges from the phone booth, picks up his overcoat from a chair, and the woman addresses him, thinking that he is the police lieutenant. Clarke tells her that he's not a policeman and offers to help, noticing that she is upset. After he hands her a handkerchief to wipe her tears, it becomes clear that she is Jimmy Phillips's mother; she mentions that her son held up the liquor store with an empty gun. Clarke rushes back into Lt. Schwartz's office and asks if the gun was empty, as Mrs. Phillips said. The lieutenant confirms that it was but adds that there was no way for Clarke to have known this. Clarke is visibly upset and Schwartz hangs up the telephone to announce that Jimmy died five minutes ago.

David Carlile as Lou
After the mid-show break, the scene shifts to a cemetery, where Jimmy's funeral ends and Clarke stands near the edge of the crowd of mourners, watching Mrs. Miller wipe her tears. After the crowd has dispersed, Clarke approaches the last man left and learns that he is Henry Willet, who runs the answering service where Mrs. Phillips works. Clarke introduces himself and offers to help, pressing several bills into Willet's hand in order to share the cost of the funeral and insisting that "'I'm not trying to buy my way out of this.'" "'Don't punish yourself too much about this,'" replies Willet, "'he wasn't the angel she likes to think he was... it's his own fault.'"

Jesslyn Fax as Mrs. Gruber, the liquor store clerk
At the radio station where Clarke works, he sees Mrs. Phillips arrive in the lobby and she thanks him for helping to pay for the funeral. She asks if he'll help her "'come to terms with it,'" by talking to her and they agree that they'll meet at his apartment that evening. Later, she arrives at his "'lovely apartment,'" one of several that are "'ringed around the swimming pool,'" and the setting contrasts with the hard life led by Mrs. Phillips and her son. As Clarke makes coffee, Mrs. Phillips mentions having had a long talk with Lt. Schwartz. He admits that he was frightened but insists that he was shooting at the car, not at Jimmy, and he does not remember how many shots were fired.

Selmer Jackson as the priest
Mrs. Phillips points out that he shot Jimmy three times and she asks Clarke why he kept shooting, even after the car had stopped. He explains that he kept firing because he was afraid and he grows more agitated, his voice rising, sweat appearing on his face, telling her that "'You don't know how it feels, having a gun pointed at you.'" She watches him quietly, judging him, as he falls apart. She walks back to the sofa and pulls a gun from her purse, pointing it him and emphasizing that "'This gun is loaded, Mr. Clarke.'" He continues to insist that he was frightened when he shot her son and he breaks down, pleading with her. Finally, she lowers the gun, puts it back in her bag, puts the bag down, and goes to the closet, where she gets her coat and puts it on, all with her back to Clarke.

Bob Paget as Jimmy Phillips
When Mrs. Phillips turns around, she sees that Clarke is now pointing her own gun at her and his face is bathed in sweat. He shoots once and she falls to the floor; he shoots a second time and her body jerks with the bullet's impact. Clarke speaks the show's final line: "'I told you not to point a gun at me.'"

"Self Defense" is the title of this thrilling episode, and the question of whether Clarke acted in self-defense when he shot Jimmy hangs over the whole show. Today, there would be no question that Clarke's actions in following and shooting Jimmy were inappropriate, but in 1961, his character is reassured by two men; both Lt. Schwartz and Henry Willet tell him that he did the right thing and has nothing to feel bad about. The main female character, however, has a different opinion, and she confronts Clarke with questions about why he fired multiple gunshots at Jimmy when the young man was not firing back. It seems clear that Mrs. Phillips has uncovered the basis for Clarke's self-doubt, and when she threatens him with a gun he snaps and responds by killing her.

Alexander Lockwood as Henry Willet
Reviewers on IMDb have suggested that Clarke suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder stemming from his wartime experiences, and that may be true, but there is another, perhaps far-fetched explanation for what happens in this episode. George Nader, who plays Clarke, was a handsome, gay actor who kept his sexual orientation from the public during the years he appeared on screen. What if the actions of his character in "Self Defense" are taken as extreme measures to conceal Clarke's feelings of attraction for other men? In the opening scene, young Jimmy pokes a loaded gun (a phallic symbol) into Clarke's back, causing him to have a noticeable reaction. Sweat pours down his face. When he first entered the store, the clerk, a middle-aged woman, looked at him strangely. Does Clarke grab the gun, run outside, and kill Jimmy as a way of pushing his own desire deep below the surface?

In the next scene, at the police station, Lt. Schwartz spends much of the scene watching Clarke with an odd expression on his face, as if he's trying to figure out the man before him. After the funeral, Henry looks at Clarke strangely and Clarke shoves a handful of bills into his hand. Finally, there is Clarke's relationship with Mrs. Phillips. He is 38 years old and she is a few years older; the actress who plays her, Audrey Totter, is attractive, even in a role as an 18-year-old man's mother who is divorced and works at an unglamorous job. Clarke meets her at work and they arrange for her to visit him at his home that evening, but there is no hint of sexual tension between them.

Aiming at the car
That evening, Clarke's home is presented as a classic bachelor pad, one of several that surround a central swimming pool; the apartment is beautiful but there is no suggestion of any female presence. Even when he and Mrs. Phillips are alone together, he is tortured and, the more she questions him, the more upset he gets. Finally, she points a gun at him (another phallic symbol) and he snaps. When her back is turned, he takes the gun and, as soon as she turns around, he shoots and kills her, putting a second bullet into her body as it lies on the floor, not a threat to him at all.

Is the character of Gerald Clarke meant to be a gay man who can't help killing out of zeal to cover up his identity? Far-fetched as the idea may be, one can easily support it by watching the show closely. "Self Defense" is a wonderful half-hour of noir that moves quickly and rachets up the tension until its shocking finale. The teleplay was written by John T. Kelley (1921-1972), who wrote for TV from 1951 to 1971 and whose few movie credits include some dialogue for Planet of the Apes (1968). This was one of two scripts he wrote for Alfred Hitchcock Presents; the other was "Apex." "Self Defense" appears to be an original teleplay; the cover of a copy of the shooting script says that it is either "from his story" or "from the story," but I have been unable to locate any published story.

At Gerald's place
The show is directed by Paul Henreid (1908-1992) who began his career as a film actor. He started directing in the early 1950s and he directed 29 episodes of the Hitchcock show, including "A Little Sleep."

George Nader (1921-2002), who plays Gerald Clarke, served in WWII and then starred in films and on TV from 1950 to 1974. He was in Robot Monster (1953) and he was seen in two episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents; the other one was "Where Beauty Lies." Nader and his partner Mark Miller were close friends with Rock Hudson and inherited the interest from the actor's large estate when he died of AIDS. Nader also wrote a science fiction novel titled Chrome (1987).

Mrs. Phillips is played by Audrey Totter (1917-2013), who had a small part in The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946) and a lead role in The Lady in the Lake (1947). She appeared in numerous TV episodes and movies from 1945 to 1987 and was a regular on four different TV series. She appeared in one other episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, "Madame Mystery."

In smaller roles:
  • Steve Gravers (1922-1978) as Lt. Schwartz; trained at the Actors Studio, he was on screen from 1950 to 1978, mostly on television, and he appeared in four episodes of the Hitchcock show, including "The Thirty-First of February."
  • David Carlile (1931-2006) as Lou, the other policeman who interviews Clarke; his career was mostly on TV from the mid-1950s to the late 1990s; he was on the Hitchcock half-hour seven times, including "A Night With the Boys."
  • Jesslyn Fax (1893-1975) as Mrs. Gruber, whose store is robbed; she was on screen from 1950 to 1969 and had small parts in Hitchcock's Rear Window (1954) and North By Northwest (1959), as well as on five episodes of the Hitchcock TV show, including "Coming. Mama" She was also on Batman and she appeared in "Four O' Clock," Hitchcock's TV adaptation of a Cornell Woolrich story in 1957 for Suspicion.
  • Selmer Jackson (1888-1971) as the priest at the funeral; he often played small, uncredited roles in film or on TV from 1921 to 1963. He appeared in Hitchcock's Saboteur (1942) and was in six episodes of the Hitchcock show; his last credited role was in "Starring the Defense."
  • Bob Paget (1935- ) as Jimmy Phillips; he was on screen from 1955 to 2019 and played one of the auditioning Hitlers in The Producers (1968).
  • Alexander Lockwood (1902-1990) as Henry Willet; born in Austria-Hungary, he was on screen from 1952 to 1988. He had small parts in three episodes of the Hitchcock TV show and played minor roles in Saboteur (1942), North By Northwest (1959), and Family Plot (1976).
Watch "Self Defense" online here or buy the DVD here.

Sources:

The FICTIONMAGS Index, www.philsp.com/homeville/fmi/0start.htm.

"George Nader - Alfred Hitchcock Presents - Self Defense - 1961." GEORGE NADER - ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS - SELF DEFENSE - 19, www.rock-hudson-estate-collection.com/scripts/george-nader/george-nader-alfred-hitchcock-presents-self-defense-1961.html. Accessed 4 May 2025.

Grams, Martin, and Patrik Wikstrom. The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion. OTR Pub, 2001.

IMDb, www.imdb.com.

"Self Defense." Alfred Hitchcock Presents, season 6, episode 32, NBC, 23 May 1961.

Wikipedia, www.wikipedia.org.

Listen to Al Sjoerdsma discuss "A Little Sleep" here!

In two weeks: "Night Caller," starring Felicia Farr and Bruce Dern!

Monday, May 12, 2025

Journey Into Strange Tales Issue 137: Atlas/Marvel Science Fiction & Horror Comics!

 

The Marvel/Atlas 
Horror Comics
Part 122
October 1956 Part II
by Peter Enfantino
and Jack Seabrook


Mystery Tales #46
Cover by Bill Everett

"Forbidden!" (a: John Forte) 
"Crisis!" (a: Don Heck) 
"Where is Lola Drake?" 
(a: Dick Giordano [?] & Vince Colletta) 
"The Fake" (a: Al Williamson & Roy Krenkel) 
"The Strange Man!" (a: Sol Brodsky) 
"The Empty Room!" (a: Robert Q. Sale) 

Mobster Howard Burch has an irrational desire (some might say too irrational) to see what awaits him in the closet of his childhood home. Ma always told him that when she opened the door once she saw little Howie's future. From then on, the closet was "Forbidden!" But once Howard is through serving a five year sentence on Rykers, he heads right back to the old house, hoping to get answers to decades-old questions. Will he receive the knowledge he desires when he turns that knob? To make a long story short: No! Not that many of these stories make sense, but why would a criminal, on the run from the cops, stall his getaway to look into a closet? Especially since he's already in the future his mother would have seen.

A Martian armada is heading swiftly for Earth. "Crisis!" The military want to act fast and blast the ships into atoms, but the scientists argue that the intentions may be friendly. Eventually, a compromise is reached; Major Cabot will commandeer a fleet of fighter jets into outer space and await the aliens. If the visitors make any threatening move, Cabot is to take action. When a door opens in the lead craft and a sphere drops towards Earth, Talbot assumes the Martians have thrown out the first pitch in a galaxy war. He unleashes hell and the Martians turn tail.

Later, down on Earth, the sphere dropped by the spaceship is examined and a recording plays, notifying all that the Martians had come in peace and to prove it they were prepared to hand over a solution to all of Earth's troubles... war, famine, disease, Yoko Ono... the works. Boy, are we fools! Klaatu Barada Nikto! But at least the tired script is embellished by some nifty graphics by Harlan Ellison's whipping-boy, Don Heck 

Ed Gifford knows a good thing when he spots it, so he badgers millionairess Lola Drake into marrying him. Lola has other ideas; she's not in love with Ed. But Ed can be a determined dude and he hires a hypnotist to convince Lola that marrying Ed is the best thing in the world. While Ed is discussing the mesmerist's fee with him, Lola slips out the window and jumps into a nearby bomber jet (!), taking to the blue skies.

Ed hires a pilot to follow Lola and they crash land in a field. Ed has to write the pilot a check for  damage. He catches up to Lola and convinces her to head back with him. He has to buy a car from a nearby farmer and writes the man a check. Long story short: the hypnotist was in love with Lola and actually put Ed under a spell. The dope spends his entire life savings and loses his chance at a million bucks! "Where is Lola Drake?" is dumb with a capital "D." The Giordano/Colletta art is competent but looks more suited to a romance funny book.

In "The Fake," a sailor stumbles across Atlantis and discovers the legendary city's secret: it was founded by visitors from the planet Xyli! Slapdash sci-fi/fantasy script is heightened by Krenkel/Williamson graphics but, as usual, the boys aren't given much to work with other than talking heads. More's the pity. Fantastic adventures on the high seas continue with "The Strange Man!" Captain Mark Trent wrecks his ship and loses his nerve until a weird stranger tells him to quit whining and grow a set. Trent then overcomes wild obstacles, including giant birds and a rock storm from the heavens, to rediscover his love of the sailing life. Turns out, Trent was sailing in a youngster's toy boat. Groan.

In the truly awful final story this issue, "The Empty Room!," Lord Ainsley stops speaking after his son goes missing in the war. Ainsley blames himself for talking the kid into enlisting in the first place but... and here's the good news... Ainsley and his son are actually visitors from a parallel universe and Ainsley Jr. has been recalled to Earth-II to mend from the injuries he sustained in a fierce battle. More tedious and safe fluff delivered by a writing staff clearly drained of any original ideas.-Peter


Mystic #52
Cover by Bill Everett

"The Effigy!" (a: Wally Wood) 
"Iron Face!" (a: Bob Powell) ★1/2
"The Secret of the Iron Needle!" (a: John Forte) 
"The Last Laugh!" (a: Pete Morisi) 
"They Wait in the Caves!" (a: Mort Drucker) ★1/2
(r: Vault of Evil #10)
"The Land of Missing Persons" (a: Jim Infantino) 

On the run from the cops, Vincent Durand ducks into the headquarters of the voodoo cult he used to belong to, headed up by Papa Genoux. The old man agrees to hide Durand, but when the cops come, they arrest the whole lot of them on suspicion of harboring a fugitive. Papa confesses to the police that he knows nothing of Durand's crimes and that the crook is no longer a member of their loony band of cultists.

Later, after the police release Papa and his followers, Durand makes a repeat appearance. Papa Geroux pleads with the wanted man to give himself up, but to no avail. Durand leaves, pledging he'll never surrender. So it's time for Papa and the voodoo cult to craft "The Effigy!," a small doll resembling Durand that supposedly has supernatural powers. Sure enough, the doll puts Durand through all kinds of obstacles and he narrowly escapes capture several times. Late that night, he busts into the cult HQ and steals his effigy, but the cops are waiting for him. He and Little Vince tear off into the night. Durand tosses the doll out the window high atop a cliff road, hoping the spell will be broken, but ultimately slams the brakes and heads back to search for the little rascal.

Oh, how far Atlas has fallen in a couple years. In 1954, Durand would have been torn to pieces by a badger who happens upon the doll and starts chewing but, here in 1956, the guy has an onrush of nerves and changes his mind. There is no suspense to speak of because we know, thanks to the CCA, voodoo is toothless. I do think it's a nice touch that the voodoo worshippers wear yellow robes and appear to be respectable businessmen rather than salivating zombies. Aside from that peculiarity, the Wally Wood art is the only drawing point. That splash looks like it was pulled straight from an EC comic.

In the future world of 1985, the West and the East fight a long, bitter war but the East holds the upper hand when they invent a gizmo they dub "Iron Face!" that can project the innermost thoughts of POWs. Now the West's secrets are out! But the West has its sly dogs as well... they come up with a foolproof plan: send the stupidest man in the Army to be captured and reveal false war plans. What a great idea! And it works. The stinkin' commies never knew what hit them!

In "The Secret of the Iron Needle!," space explorers, searching for a planet just like Earth, land on what they consider to be a prime candidate. There is foliage, animals, and oxygen. What else could you ask for? There's just that pesky giant silver tube that concerns our intrepid voyagers. In the end, it turns out to be a key to a child's wind-up toy. Time to amscray! Yep, it's an idea that's been done to death, but I thought it was moderately entertaining anyway. The final few panels, where the recognition hits these astronauts, is pretty funny stuff.

In the three-page "The Last Laugh!," a heartless businessman wishes he lived in "the dark ages" and gets his wish. Panyard and Nolan sail the seas in search of pearls but, on their latest voyage, they come up short and Panyard decides to get rid of his partner. In a bizarre accident, Nolan takes a dive overboard and is lost at sea. A year later, since his money earned from the paltry pearl expedition is almost gone, Panyard runs across Nolan on a Singapore street. When pushed, Nolan reveals he swam to a nearby island and was rescued by natives, who revealed to him their large cache of pearls! 

Panyard begs Nolan for the coordinates of the island and his ex-partner agrees. A few weeks later, Panyard steps ashore onto the magical island and meets the friendly natives, who happily lead him to the good stuff. There's only one hitch... I have a fond spot for this one as I can vividly recall reading it as an impressionable pre-teen in Vault of Evil #10. It's got some great Mort Drucker art and, yeah, the ending is a bit limp and unthreatening, but what post-code strip wasn't?

In the dreary and unimaginatively drawn "The Land of Missing Persons," a nutty scientist uses a magnetic beam to divert airplanes and their passengers into a desolate hideout, where they are forced to build the egghead's perfect city within a huge mountain. As usual, the evil genius's motives don't add up (he was unrecognized in our world for his brilliance, so he's gone on a dangerous pout). There's one decent twist in the final panel but even that doesn't make much sense.-Peter


Mystical Tales #3
Cover by Bill Everett

"Morton's Machine!" (a: Bob Forgione & Jack Abel) 
"Someone Behind Me!" (a: Reed Crandall) 
"Four Doors To...?" (a: Ed Winiarski) ★1/2
"Bedtime Story" (a: ? and Jack Abel (?)) ★1/2
"Someone Stopped the Bus!" (a: Tony Mortellaro) ★1/2
"Trapped in the Phantom Lighthouse!" (a: Mac Pakula) 

Walt Morton is a practical joker who has convinced his co-worker, an electronics expert named Harris, that he's working on a real time machine. One night, a short in the power system causes a fire and Harris risks his life to save the machine. Months pass and Harris announces that, despite a few kinks, the machine is ready. The next evening, Morton gathers his colleagues to see the machine fail but, when Harris pulls the switch, Morton disappears! Harris explains that one of the kinks is that "Morton's Machine!" sends people into the past but can't return them to the present!

I have to give Bob Forgione and Jack Abel credit for going above and beyond the call of duty to illustrate a mundane story. The splash page, which I've reproduced here, is striking, and the art throughout the story is sharp and more visually interesting than your run of the mill Atlas four-pager.

While prospecting for uranium in the Rocky Mountains, Harry and Fred have an accident when the brakes fail on their jeep. Harry's leg is broken and Fred discovers that the spot where they are stuck is loaded with the valuable mineral, but they have nothing to eat and no prospects for being saved. Fred abandons Harry and walks off alone, thinking that it's every man for himself, but he soon realizes that there is "Someone Behind Me!" A shadowy figure follows Fred, who soon does the right thing and returns to Harry, just in time to shoot and kill a mountain lion. A rescue plane flies over and the duo are saved; Fred sees the shadowy figure and it reveals that it is his conscience, which will now disappear.

Despite the corny ending, this is a solid story for a post-code Atlas comic, with art by another one of the EC greats, Reed Crandall. Of course, since the company was probably paying very little, it's not the best four pages I've ever seen from him, but it's better than most of what we read and he creates a haunting atmosphere.

Small-time crook Blackie Morgan robs a jewelry store and runs from the cops, hiding in the cellar of a deserted tenement. He meets a mysterious old man who offers "Four Doors To...??" and suggests that they'll lead to freedom if Blackie survives. The crook passes through the doors and enters the dimensions of guilt, conscience, remorse, and servitude, after which he realizes that he should turn himself in. Emerging from the final dimension, Blackie discovers that he has aged twenty years and the jewels were fakes to begin with!

These four doors should have been left closed. At least the editor didn't waste one of his better artists on this hokey morality play.

Little Tad asks Grandpa for a "Bedtime Story" and is treated to the tale of the first voyage from the Earth to the moon on a rocket ship called the Thunderer that was damaged halfway to its destination. There weren't enough space boats for everyone to exit, so the captains and their wives stayed aboard to wait for another ship to rescue them. Time passed and they had children and grandchildren who grew up thinking the spaceship was home and not knowing they were in space. Guess which grandpa and grandson are excited at the end to see a rescue ship approaching?

Groan! The GCD speculates that Jack Abel did the inks, but the bland pencils go uncredited, as does the lifeless story.

A bus carrying a traveling vaudeville troupe nearly drives off a cliff in the snowstorm but doom is averted when a ventriloquist's dummy is catapulted out of his carrying case and lands on the brake! "Someone Stopped the Bus!" is that rare Atlas post-code story where the writing is a hair better than the art--how many traveling vaudeville troupes were still going in 1956? The idea is so goofy that it manages to hold up for three entire pages.

Ed and his pal are a pair of writers whose small boat is tossed in a storm. Fortunately, they end up right where they wanted to go, at the lighthouse they were just hired to man. That night, the bright light illuminates a fleet of jets and the pair assume they're a foreign attack force. In order to save the country, they knock over the lighthouse with the butts of a couple of rifles, and the ships disappear. They are fired the next day but, on searching the area, they can't find any sign of the lighthouse, just part of one of the ships, floating in the water. It seems they were "Trapped in the Phantom Lighthouse!" though I can't exactly say they were ever trapped or what the heck was going on.-Jack


Spellbound #30
Cover by Bill Everett

"He Must Be Destroyed" (a: Doug Wildey) 
"Homecoming" (a: Paul Reinman) 
"We're Going to Drown" (a: Bill Walton) 
"Beware... the Giants" (a: Vic Carrabotta) ★1/2
"What Lurks in the Fog?" (a: Marvin Stein) 
"The Tyrant!" (a: unknown) ★1/2

Carl Terrell's frequent headaches led him to a doctor, who ran tests and concluded that he was not normal. Carl fled town and now mopes about how he's different from everyone else. He can will objects to come to him, he can read minds, he can make people do things...your typical X-Man. Suddenly, a voice in his head calls to him and he's so excited to learn that there's another mutant that he drops everything and drives an hour to Boonetown to meet Justin Ford.

A newspaper reports on a crime wave in Boonetown and Carl realizes that Ford is using his powers for no good. Carl tells Justin, through brain messages, that he's not that kind of mutant and, when they meet, they have a mental battle that ends in both of them losing their mutant powers. Carl walks off, happy to be normal.

"He Must Be Destroyed" is terrible, from Doug Wildey's sub-par artwork to the bizarre story that ends with a standoff described this way: "Never was there such a duel upon the Earth before! Mind against mind, strange power against strange power!" You'd think that might generate some excitement in the artist, but no--we see the back of Carl's head and Justin in shadow, with a lightning bolt between them to represent this epic battle. In the next panel, Justin collapses, still in shadow. It's hardly Professor X vs. Magneto.

As boys, Phil and Jay liked to pretend to go to Mars; Phil wanted to help mankind, while Jay wanted to help himself. Fourteen years later, the brothers are in space, on a rocket ship coming back from the Red Planet. Their "Homecoming" is clouded by the fact that both contracted an alien virus! When they land on Earth, Jay cares not for others and leaps into a jeep, which he soon crashes. In an isolation ward, Phil learns that Jay has died, but the optimist is certain that a cure will be found and mankind will conquer Mars.

I can't believe I'm giving a one star rating to a story drawn by Paul Reinman, but this is terrible. There's little rationale for them having a virus or for Phil's concluding optimism.

Three men go down to the ocean floor in a giant diving bell; one is a professor, who has a theory that man might have evolved under the sea had he not come onto land. The cable lowering the bell snaps and it falls to the bottom, where the men fear that "We're Going to Drown" without oxygen or a means to get back to the surface. After a few hours, an air hammer from outside pierces a hole and air is fed into the bell by a hose, providing enough air pressure to cause the bell to float to the surface, where the men are rescued. The professor thinks his experiment failed until the captain of the ship that rescued them explains that no one was sent down to rescue the men, they must have somehow developed while they were down there and saved themselves.

I read this story twice, despite the terrible art, just so I could try to figure out what happened. As best I can figure it, the trio were subject to incredibly rapid evolution that somehow allowed them to introduce an air hose from outside the bell without going outside or having an air hose. Crazy, I know, but that's the best I can do.

A trio of white explorers lurk in the brush outside a native camp in the jungle, listening to the locals talk about giants! The men head off into the jungle and are followed by the natives, who do their level best to kill them with darts. The men escape and return to safety, where they are told that the tribe they observed are pygmies and the giants are the normal-sized white men!

I gave "Beware... the Giants" a mercy extra half star because Vic Carrabotta's art was not as bad as what I saw in the first three stories this issue. The story itself was a waste of four pages.

"What Lurks in the Fog?" you may ask? Another godforsaken Atlas story. In this one, a poor young man named Ricky thinks he's unworthy of the love of a rich young woman he met on the docks until he has a supernatural encounter with an old Spanish galleon in the fog that identified the amulet he wears around his neck as belonging to Spanish nobility. Now he can marry the rich blonde! Marvin Stein's scratchings are about on par with the rest of the pages in this train wreck of a comic.

Finally, "The Tyrant!" tells of Luther Gordwin, a scientist who invents a machine called the Futureviser that shows future events like a TV show. Leading scientists gather, without popcorn, and watch the world in 2011, where a tyrant named Mr. Supreme keeps everyone in a state of anger and hatred. Of course, he turns out to be Luther's great-grandson, so Luther destroys the machine, but Mr. Supreme still rules in the future.

Thank goodness the final panel tells us that "people will always rise against such dictators, for the people cannot be kept down for long." That's comforting in 2025 America. I knew reading this comic would be beneficial!-Jack

Next Week...
Catwoman Finally Returns...
as a Hero?!

Thursday, May 8, 2025

Henry Slesar-An Appreciation and a Bibliography

by Lawrence A. Herman

Henry Slesar
Henry Slesar might just be the most successful writer in American history that nobody has ever heard of.

Of course, some people have heard of him. If you’re a loyal reader of bare bones, you probably have read the series of reviews of episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (see here). Slesar was involved in 47 of those episodes, either as the author of the teleplay or of the story it was based on, or both.I got interested in Slesar through Hitchcock. I became an ardent fan of Hitchcock movies way back, having been just old enough to have seen Hitchcock’s last movie on its first run: 1976’s Family Plot. I became a fan of Alfred Hitchcock Presents when a local TV channel started airing the episodes. Then I started buying cheap used copies of those paperback collections of short stories published under Hitchcock’s name. I read more than five hundred stories in those collections.I picked up a collection of stories that had been published in Playboy and one of them knocked me out. It was called After and it consisted of four separate stories all taking place after a nuclear holocaust, each with an exquisitely ironic twist ending, all four of them together taking up a mere five pages. There was an introduction about the author, Henry Slesar, and how good he was at the short-short story. The name rang a bell, and I went looking back at the Hitchcock books to see if he was in there. He was, many times, having written some of my very favorite of the stories: "Case of the Kind Waitress," "Something Short of Murder," "You Can’t Blame Me," "Murder Delayed," "The House on Damn Street," and many more. And then I connected him to a bunch of the TV episodes: "Not the Running Type," "The Morning After," "The Right Kind of House," and many more.

I’d fallen into rabbit holes of collecting before (Leiber and Stoller songs, the plays of George S. Kaufman), but a few years ago I started looking Slesar up on the internet, buying and downloading as much as I could. I found out that he had written a staggering amount of work. Estimates of how many short stories he wrote go as high as 550. His IMDb page has more than 100 listings of scripts for movies and TV that either he wrote or were based on his stories. He wrote 40 episodes of the CBS Radio Mystery Theater, 25 of those in its first year. He wrote one-page mysteries that challenged the reader to find the solution; I know of 17 of them. He wrote three books of those one-page stories that were combined with acrostic crossword puzzles that gave you either the solution or clues, 80 stories total. He created a company to make jigsaw puzzles that gave clues to one-page mysteries; there are at least eight of those. He wrote a series of interactive stories for the internet. He even wrote a comic book, although that seems to have had only one issue.

He also wrote long-form works, including five novels and two novelizations. He wrote two full-length plays and six one-acts.

But none of that was how he made his main living. Until 1969, he was V.P. and Creative Director at several advertising agencies, including one he founded in 1964. In 1969 he left the advertising world to concentrate on television. Aside from writing episodes of numerous television series, he had a remarkably long run, 16 years, as the head writer of the daytime soap opera, The Edge of Night. He was also head writer of four other soap operas at various times. Using IMDb, I estimate that there were more than 4500 soap opera episodes he was responsible for. He created and was the head writer for a prime-time series, but it only lasted one year.

"The Brat," Slesar's first short story to
be published, was in this issue
His work isn’t easy to collect. Almost all the prose he wrote is out of print. There have only been four collections of his short stories in English that I know of, three of them published under the banner of Hitchcock’s name. Two are from the early 1960s, and two are from the late 1980s. There have been none since. There were many reprints of his stories in anthologies, but most of those are out of print, too. All his novels are out of print and sell for decent prices. Getting one for under $20 takes work. Getting one for $50 to $200 is much easier.

A publisher in Switzerland has published more than 25 of his books in German. I’ve collected a bunch of these and, not speaking German, mechanically translated some of the stories I couldn’t find in English using internet translators.

Some of his movie and TV work has been put out on DVD or is streaming, but some of it hasn’t, obscure shows that seem to have disappeared into the ether. Even those that were put out are mostly out of print. Occasionally you can find them on YouTube, or being sold by a rare films site. It is probable that some of his TV work doesn’t exist anymore. That is definitely true of many episodes of his soap operas, which were erased years ago.

One of many title cards
from Alfred Hitchcock Presents
Many of his stories were published in old pulp fiction magazines that went out of business quickly, making copies rare. It’s made even harder because it’s often difficult to tell what issues of what magazines have Slesar stories; even sites selling old magazines rarely put tables of contents in the descriptions.

I spent a lot of hours scraping the internet for information. I found a great bibliography of Slesar’s short stories at the FictionMags Index (http://www.philsp.com). I’ve expanded it to include his other work, and have found about 20 stories that weren’t in it.

My version has 754 entries at the moment. That includes 30 articles about Slesar or reviews of his work. I count the soap operas as one entry each, regardless of number of episodes. Of these 754 entries, I’ve managed to collect some version of 627 of them.

A few notes on the index:
  • It’s a work in progress. If you have corrections or additional information, I’d love to hear from you.
  • -00- for a date means either that I just don’t know it or there isn’t any more info, such as the publication day of a magazine that’s published monthly.
  • TV show's credits don’t generally tell you what story an episode is based on. I’ve put those in mostly based on me recognizing the story (or a small part of it).
  • Wikipedia says Terror From the Year 5000 is based on "Bottle Baby." There’s nothing of the plot, only the idea of a woman from the future. Good enough, I suppose.
  • I’ve put in only the original publication, but many have been reprinted as part of collections or in later issues of the magazines. The FictionMags Index mentioned above is a good source for the reprints.
  • A few of these items were co-written; I haven’t put that info in yet.
  • Likewise for the exact credit line on the films and TV shows. Some are by Slesar, others are just based on his stories, many both. I’ll get that in at some point, too.
  • Some of these were originally published under pseudonyms. Wikipedia helped sort out what I should look for. I haven’t put that info in yet, either.
  • If the only publishing information for a story is a German book, that means I have it only in German and haven’t been able to match it to an English title. This definitely means some stories are out of place chronologically, because all I have is the book reprint year.
  • A story has an a/k/a only if it appeared in print with more than one title; titles changed for film, TV, or radio, don’t.
Have I gotten to the bottom of the barrel on Slesar’s work? Some of the adaptations for film and TV are pretty bad, but almost all the short stories are worth it. I’m still trying to find others. So many are gems, and others just good fun.

I’m happy to share this index of Slesar’s works and would love to find other fans of Henry Slesar out there. He deserves to be better known.

HENRY SLESAR BIBLIOGRAPHY


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1958-00-00 The Man in the Chair

Comic Book

1966-00-00 Kosher Comics

Introductions

1985-00-00 Introduction to Hitchcock in Prime Time

1989-00-00 Introduction to Death on Television: The Best of Henry Slesar's Alfred Hitchcock Stories

Jigsaw Puzzles

1973-00-00 The Case of the Snoring Skinflint

1974-00-00 The Case of the Shaky Showman

1974-00-00 Who Is the Monster of Midvale?

1978-00-00 The Case of His Headless Highness

1992-00-00 A Classic Case of Murder

1994-00-00 Foul Play and Cabernet

1994-00-00 Murder Makes a Call

1997-00-00 The Haunted Garden

Movies

Full Length

1958-00-00 Terror From the Year 5000

                     Based on "Bottle Baby"

                     American-International/Sam Z. Arkoff

1964-00-00 The Eyes of Annie Jones

                     Based on/Adapted as "The Girl Who Found Things"

                     British

1965-00-00 Two on a Guillotine

                     Co-writer, story by

1966-00-00 One of Our Spies Is Missing

                     Story by

                     Based on "The Bridge of Lions"

                     The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

1969-00-00 Honeymoon With a Stranger

                     Co-writer

                     Based on Piege Pour un Homme Seul by M. Robert Thomas

1971-00-00 Murders in the Rue Morgue

                     Co-writer, based on "Murders in the Rue Morgue" by Edgar Allan Poe

1978-00-00 Vorhang auf, wir spielen Mord (Curtain Up, We Play Murder)

                     Co-writer

                     Based on "Enter Murderers"

                     German

1983-00-00 Der Tod kommt durch die Tur [Death Comes Through the Door])

                     Based on "The Thing at the Door"

                     German

1984-00-00 Yomigaetta engi [Revived Acting]

                     Based on "Starring the Defense"

                     Japanese

1988-00-00 Kaitô Ruby [Thief Ruby]

                     Based on the Ruby Martinson Stories

                     Japanese

1995-00-00 The Maddening

                     Co-writer, based on Playmates by Andrew Neiderman,

2002-00-00 Heartbreak Hospital

                     Co-writer, based on Murder at Heartbreak Hospital

Segments

1975-00-00 Mütter [Mothers]

                     German

1977-00-00 Sanfter Schreken [Gente Terror]

                     Based on "The Day of the Execution"

                     German

1992-00-00 Sacrifice for Love, from Three Tales From the Inner Sanctum

                     Based on "Museum Piece"

1992-00-00 Ecstacy, from Three Tales From the Inner Sanctum

                     Based on "The Substitute" 

Shorts

1983-00-00 A Choice of Witnesses

                     Based on "A Choice of Witnesses"

                     Student Film

1993-00-00 Il sorvegliante [The Supervisor])

                     Italian

1997-00-00 Der Grosse Lacher [The Big Laugh]

                     Based on Boffola

                     German

2010-00-00 The Candidate

                     Based on "The Candidate"

2011-00-00 Satilik Ev [House for Sale]

                     Based on "The Right Kind of a House"

                     Turkish

2012-00-00 Chapeau

                     French

2014-00-00 die Prufung

                     Based on "Examination Day"

                     German

2016-00-00 The Philip Highland Fan Club

Novels

1959-00-00 The Grey Flannel Shroud

1960-00-00 Enter Murderers

1963-00-00 The Bridge of Lions

1974-00-00 The Thing at the Door

1998-00-00 Murder at Heartbreak Hospital

Novelizations

1957-00-00 20 Million Miles to Earth

                     Based on the movie  by Bob Williams, Christopher Knopf, Charlott Knight, Ray                                       Harryhausen

1969-00-00 The Edge of Night No 1: The Seventh Mask

                     Based on The Edge of Night soap opera episodes 

Plays

Full Length

1966-00-00 The Four-Cornered Couch

1991-00-00 He Had a Hat

One Act

1963-00-00 The Right Kind of House, by Anne Coulter Martens

                     Based on "The Right Kind of a House"

1991-00-00 Speak to the Dead

                     One Act of Three Acts of Murder

1991-00-00 Hanged for a Sheep

                     Based on "Hanged for a Sheep"

                     One Act of Three Acts of Murder

1991-00-00 The Right Kind of House

                     Based on "The Right Kind of a House"

                     One Act of Three Acts of Murder

1992-00-00 Coming Home

                     One Act of Letters From the Devil

1992-00-00 Invitation to Lunch

                     One Act of Letters From the Devil

1992-00-00 A Letter Too Late

                     Based on "A Letter Too Late"

                     One Act of Letters From the Devil

1997-00-00 The Veil

                     Based on "The Girl Who Found Things/The Eyes of Annie Jones"

Puzzle Books

1985-00-00 Acrostic Mysteries (40 Stories With Puzzles)

1991-00-00 Inspector Cross Vol 1 (20 Stories With Puzzles)

1991-00-00 Inspector Cross Vol 2 (20 Stories With Puzzles)

Radio

CBS Radio Mystery Theater

All episodes based on stories of the same name except as noted.

1974-01-26 "The Ring of Truth"

1974-01-24 "Deadly Honeymoon"

1974-01-20 "The Chinaman Button"

1974-01-19 "The Girl Who Found Things"

                     Based on "The Eyes of Annie Jones" (?)

1974-01-06 "The Old Ones Are Hard to Kill"

1974-01-07 "The Return of the Moresbys"

1974-01-09 "Lost Dog"

1974-02-28 "A Choice of Witnesses"

1974-02-24 "The Horse That Wasn't for Sale"

1974-02-06 "After the Verdict"

                     Based on "Second Verdict"

1974-03-18 "Sea of Troubles"

1974-04-16 "Men Without Mouths"

                     Based on "The Haunted Man"

1974-04-08 "The Locked Room"

                     Based on "Behind the Locked Door"

1974-05-16 "The Trouble With Ruth"

1974-06-25 "Where Fear Begins"

1974-06-20 "Bargain in Blood"

                     Based on "The Self Improvement of Salvadore Ross"

1974-08-22 "The Case of M.J.H."

1974-08-19 "The Hands of Mrs. Mallory"

1974-08-15 "The Final Vow"

                     Based on "Hiding Out"

1974-08-01 "The Hit Man"

                     Based on "Blood Bargain"

1974-08-09 "The Murder Museum"

                     Based on "Museum Piece"

1974-09-17 "Thicker Than Water"

1974-10-17 "The Last Escape"

1974-10-10 "The Doll"

                     "Voodoo Doll" (a/k/a "Voodoo Doll—$1.98")

1974-11-04 "Bury Me Again"

                     Based on "I’m Dead, Honey"

1975-04-15 "My Own Murderer"

                     Based on "The Man in the Mirror"

1975-05-16 "The Rise and Fall of the Fourth Reich"

1975-07-04 "The Slave"

1975-08-19 "Welcome for a Dead Man"

                     Based on "You Can’t Blame Me"

1975-12-03 "I Promise to Kill"

                     Based on "Promise to Kill"

1976-02-11 "You Owe Me a Death"

                     Based on "Half a Death"

1977-03-17 "Jobo"

1977-06-02 "A God Named Smith"

1977-06-10 "The Night We Died"

1979-12-12 "The Movie Makers"

1980-01-16 "Prisoner of the Machines"

                     Based on "Prisoner in Orbit"

1980-04-09 "Kitty"

                     Original (?)

1980-05-19 "Two of a Kind"

                     Based on "Real, Real Crazy"

1980-05-28 "The Bluff"

1980-07-16 "Murder Preferred"

                     Based on "The Seventh Mask"

1980-11-17 "The Eleventh Plague"

1982-04-19 "Shelter"

                     Based on "The Bottom Line"

1982-10-29 "I Hate Harold"

                     "The Contessa Collection"

The Twilight Zone Radio Dramas

2005-00-00 "The Old Man in the Cave"

                     Based on "The Old Man"

                     Adapted by another author

2006-00-00 "The Self Improvement of Salvadore Ross"

                     Adapted by another author

Short Stories

1955-09-00 "The Brat"

                     Imaginative Tales

1956-05-00 "Alibi on the Steve Allen Show"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1956-05-00 The Bloodless Laws

                    Fantastic Universe

1956-06-00 "A Victim Must Be Found"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1956-07       "The Monument"

                     Amazing Stories

1956-07-00 "The Movie Makers"

                     Fantastic Universe

1956-08-00 "The Man With Two Faces"

                     Manhunt

1956-10-00 "A Trip to Florida"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1956-10-00 "Messenger"

                     Fantastic Universe

1956-10-00 "A Message From Our Sponsor"

                     Infinity Science Fiction

1956-10-00 "We’ll Open Your Skull"

                     Trapped Detective Story Magazine

1956-11-00 "Sleep It Off"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1956-11-00 "The Monster Died at Dawn"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1956-12-00 "Marriages Are Made in Detroit"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1956-12-00 "Repeat Broadcast"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1956-12-00 "Coward’s Death"

                     Fantastic

1956-12-00 "Death Rattle"

                     Fantastic

1956-12-00 "The Chimp"

                     Fantastic

1956-12-00 "Thought for Today"

                     If

1956-12-00 "Who Am I?"

                     Super-Science Fiction

1957-01-00 "The Trouble With Ruth"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-01-00 "Heart"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-01-00 "Reluctant Genius"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-01-00 "Dream Town"

                     Fantastic Universe

1957-01-00 "Cop for a Day"

                     Manhunt

1957-01-00 "The Second Jury"

                     Killers Mystery Story Magazine

1957-01-00 "Instrument of Torture"

                     Verdict Crime Detection Magazine

1957-02-00 "A Kiss for the Conqueror"

                     Fantastic

1957-02-00 "Beauty Contest?"

                     Fantastic

1957-02-00 "My Robot"

                     Fantastic

1957-02-00 "The Right Kind of a House"

                     Michael Shayne Mystery Magazine

1957-02-00 "Mr. Loneliness"

                     Super-Science Fiction

1957-02-00  "The Morning After"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1957-02-00 "Handcuffed Slayer"

                     Terror Detective Story Magazine

1957-02-00 "Fraternity Hell Week"

                     Trapped Detective Story Magazine

1957-03-00 "M Is for the Many"

                     Clean Crimes and Neat Murders

1957-03-00 "The Goddess of World 21"

                     Fantastic

1957-03-00 "Proposal of Marriage"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-03-00 "To Save a Body"

                     Manhunt

1957-03-00 "The Gentleman From Boston"

                     Crime and Justice Detective Story Magazine

1957-03-00 "A Night in Rockbury"

                     Nugget

1957-04-00 "Abe Lincoln—Android"

                     Fantastic

1957-04-00 "Bottle Baby"

                     Fantastic

1957-04-00 "25 Words or Less"

                     Fantastic Universe

1957-04-00 "Brainchild"

                     If

1957-04-00 "The Pleasures of Reading"

                     Murders Most Macabre


Illustration from "Victory Parade"

1957-04-00 "Victory Parade"

                     Playboy

1957-04-00 "The Kissing Dead!"

                     Sure Fire Detective Stories

1957-04-00 "Too Anxious to Murder" (a/k/a "Black Money")

                     Sure Fire Detective Stories

1957-05-00 "40 Detectives Later"

                     Manhunt

                     *This story appears in 100 Menacing Little Murder Stories with the end cut off.

1957-05-00 "For Services Rendered" (a/k/a "RFD #2")

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-05-00 "Symbol of Authority"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1957-05-00 "The Metal Martyr"

                     Fantastic

1957-05-00 "Sob Story" (a/k/a "He Disappeared!")

                     Guilty Detective Story Magazine

1957-05-00 "Kill the Umpire!"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-06-00 "The Day of the Execution"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-06-00 "No Room in Heaven"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-06-00 "The Babbit From Bzlfsk"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-06-00 "The Mad Killer"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1957-06-00 "Ben’s Idea"

                     Satellite Science Fiction

1957-06-00 "Desire Woman"

                     Super-Science Fiction

1957-06-00 "The Dope"

                     Super-Science Fiction

1957-07-00 "A God Named Smith"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-07-00 "The Anonymous Man"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-07-00 "The Marriage Machine"

                     Fantastic

1957-07-00 "The Secret of Marracott Deep"

                     Fantastic

1957-07-00 "The Show Must Go On"

                     Infinity Science Fiction

1957-07-00 "The Substitute"

                     Manhunt

1957-07-00 "A Foot in the Door"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-08-00 "Monster on Stage 4"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-08-00 "Inheritance"

                     Fantastic

1957-08-00 "Tailor-Made Killers"

                     Fantastic

1957-08-00 "Traveling Man"

                     Fantastic

1957-08-00 "Appointment in 806"

                     Caper

1957-08-00 "Mad Dog!"

                     Sure Fire Detective Stories; Again, Honorable Whoredom at a Penny a Word (Ellison)

1957-09-00 "The First Crime of Ruby Martinson"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-09-00 "The Success Machine"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-09-00 "Saucer! Saucer!"

                     Fantastic

1957-09-00 "Before the Talent Dies"

                     Venture Science Fiction

1957-09-00 "I’m Dead, Honey"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-10-27 "The Secret Formula" (a/k/a "Attar of Love")

                     Playboy

1957-11-00 "Something Short of Murder"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-11-00 "Tool of the Gods"

                     Fantastic

1957-11-00 "A Timely Reward"

                     Mystery Digest

1957-12-00 "Get Our of Our Skies"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1957-12-00 "Personal Interview"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1957-12-00 "My Father the Cat"

                     Fantastic Universe; Faeries

1957-12-00 "Ruby Martinson, Confidence Man"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-12-00 "Death of a Mistress"

                     Trapped Detective Story Magazine

1957-12-00 "One Critic Too Many"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-12-00 "Pen Pal"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1957-12-00 "Fly Home to Betsy"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1958-01-00 "Space Brat"

                     Fantastic; Back Cat Weekly

1958-02-00 "The Mind Merchants"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-02-00 "The Night We Died"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-02-00 "Danger, Red!"

                     Fantastic


Virgil Finlay's illustration for "Jewel of Ecstasy"


1958-02-00 "Earth Specimen"

                     Fantastic

1958-02-00 "Jewel of Ecstasy"

                     Fantastic

1958-02-00 "Lost Dog"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1958-02-00 "Examination Day"

                     Playboy 

1958-03-00 "Great Men Can Die"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-03-00 "Sam’s Heart"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-03-00 "The Creators"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-03-00 "The Moon Chute"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-03-00 "Let’s Repeal Love"

                     Fantastic

1958-03-00 "The Lavender Talent"

                     Fantastic

1958-03-00 "The Search for Murphy’s Bride"

                     Fantastic

1958-03-00 "The Genie Takes a Wife"

                     Fantastic

1958-04-00 "Ruby Martinson, Ex-Con"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-04-00 "I Promise to Kill"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-04-00 "The Split-Level Ghost"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-04-00 "Boffola"

                     The Gent

1958-05-00 "Brother Robot"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-05-00 "The Invisible Man Murder Case"

                     Fantastic

1958-05-00 "The Love Nest"

                     Mystery Digest

1958-06-00 "Job for an Amateur"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-06-00 "The Man Who Took It With Him"

                     Fantastic

1958-07-00 "Whodunit"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-07-00 "No Place to Go"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-07-00 "The Love Song of Ruby Martinson"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-08-00 "Garden of Evil"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-08-00 "A Very Rare Disease"

                     Playboy

1958-08-00 "Compliments to the Chef"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-09-00 "Ten Per Cent of Murder"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1958-09-00 "Ignore All Requests"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-09-00 "The Life You Lose"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-09-00 "The Birthday Present"

                     The Dude

1958-10-00 "Case of the Kind Waitress"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-10-00 "The Delegate From Venus"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-10-00 "Deadly Honeymoon"

                     Sleuth Mystery Magazine

1958-11-00 "One Grave Too Many"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-11-00 "Legacy of Terror"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-11-00 "Mission: Murder!"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-11-00 "Never Cool a Cop"

                     Off Beat Detective Stories; A Crime for Mothers

1958-11-00 "The Jam"

                     Playboy

1958-11-00 "The Grey Flannel Shroud" (Abridged)

                     Cosmopolitan

1958-12-00 "Better Than Murder"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-12-00 "Make Me an Offer"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-12-00 "The Ordeal of Ruby Martinson"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1958-12-00 "Deadly Satellite"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1958-12-00 "The Eleventh Plague"

                     Fantastic

1959-01-00 "A Very Special Killer"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-01-00 "Dear Mrs. Fenwick"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-01-00 "Personal Challenge"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-01-00 "The Blonde From Space"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1959-01-00 "The Seven Eyes of Captain Dark"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1959-01-00 "Not the Running Type"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1959-02-00 "Peephole"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-02-00 "Like Father—Like Son"

                     Fantastic

1959-02-00 "The Only Thing to Do"

                     Mercury Mystery Magazine

1959-02-00 "A Fist Full of Money"

                     Playboy

1959-02-00 "You’ll Be Sorry When I’m Dead"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-02-00 "The Sherlock Method"

                     The Gent

1959-02-00 "Something Borrowed"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1959-03-00 "Not So Sudden Death"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-03-00 "Lay Analyst"

                     Knave

1959-04-00 "It Started Most Innocently"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-04-00 "Job Offer"

                     Satellite

1959-04-00 "Masquerade"

                     Mystery Digest

1959-05-00 "Coroner’s Jury"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-05-00 "Homicide Only Knocks Once"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-05-00 "The Seduction of Sara"

                     Knave

1959-05-00 "A Whimper"

                     The Dude

1959-05-00 "Run, Willie, Run"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1959-06-00 "The Man in the Telephone Booth"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-06-00 "Curiosity Killed a—"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-06-00 "Ruby Martinson, Cat Burglar"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-06-00 "The Trigger"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1959-06-00 "The Worth of a Man"

                     Fantastic

1959-06-00 "Heavy Schedule"

                     Rogue

1959-06-00 "Dig You Later"

                     Mystery Tales

1959-07-00 "Letter From a Very Worried Man"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-07-00 "Say It Isn’t So, Ruby Martinson"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-07-00 "Last Drink"

                     Das Morden ist des Morders Lust

1959-08-00 "Beware the Unloaded Weapon"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-08-00 "The Case of M.J.H."

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-08-00 "The Traveling Couch"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1959-08-00 "Incognito"

                     Playboy

1959-09-00 "The Toy"

                     Fantastic

1959-09-00 "Survivor No. 1" (a/k/a "The Man With the Green Nose")

                     Knave

1959-09-00 "The Tooth"

                     Knave

1959-09-00 "Alone"

                     Rogue

1959-10-00 "Ruby Martinson’s Bank Job"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-10-00 "Simon Says: Hand Over Your Fortune"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-10-00 "A Blonde for Budo"

                     Mystery Tales

1959-11-00 "A Cry From the Penthouse"

                     Playboy

1959-11-00 "Hunt the Tiger"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-12-00 "And Seven Makes Death"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1959-12-00 "One Last Look"

                     Knave

1960-01-00 "The Deadly Telephone"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-01-00 "Terror Requires Preparation"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-01-00 "Cop Without Medals"

                     The Saint Mystery Magazine

1960-02-00 "Sleep Is for the Innocent"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-03-00 "Case for Evil"

                     Rogue

1960-04-00 "Voodoo Doll" (a/k/a "Voodoo Doll--$1.98")

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-05-00 "Key to a Skeleton Closet"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-05-00 "Ruby Martinson’s Big Dentist Caper"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-05-00 "Victim, Dear Victim"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-05-00 "Trust Me, Mr. Paschetti"

                     Clean Crimes and Neat Murders

1960-06-00 "After"

                     Playboy

1960-06-00 "Joke on a Nice Old Lady"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-07-00 "The Last Escape"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-07-00 "Welcome to Our Bank"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-07-00 "As Bad as Memory"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-07-00 "More than a Nightmare"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-07-00 "Perfect Moment"

                     Swank

1960-08-00 "The Absent-Minded Murder"

                     The Saint Mystery Magazine

1960-09-00 "My Baby, the Embezzler"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-09-00 "The Crooked Road"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1960-09-00 "Who Is Mrs. Myob?"

                     Fantastic

1960-11-00 "Faster Than an Honest Man"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-11-00 "Ruby Martinson's Poisoned Pen"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-11-00 "Very Small, Very Fine"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1960-11-00 "Father Amion’s Long Shot" (a/k/a "Long Shot")

                     Fantastic

1960-12-00 "A Child Was Lost"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1960-12-00 "A Crime for Mothers"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-01-00 "Behind the Locked Door"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-01-00 "The Case of the Secret Sorrow"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-01-00 "The Lesson"

                     Swank

1961-02-00 "Real, Real Crazy"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-02-00 "Stray Bullet"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-02-00 "Mr. D. and Death"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-02-00 "The Man in the Next Cell"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1961-03-00 "Thoughts Before Murder"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-03-00 "Ruby Martinson and the Great Coffin Caper"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-04-00 "The Accomplice"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1961-04-00 "Discoverers"

                     Fantastic

1961-05-00 "Two Accounts, One Death"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-05-00 "You Can't Blame Me"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-05-00 "The Self Improvement of Salvadore Ross"

                     The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction

1961-06-00 "I'm Better than You"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-06-00 "First-Class Honeymoon"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1961-07-00 "Murder Out of a Hat"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-07-00 "The Dirty Detail"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1961-08-00 "Dig We Must"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-08-00 "Policeman’s Lot"

                     Fantastic

1961-08-00 "The Stuff"

                     Galaxy

1961-08-00 "The Candidate"

                     Rogue

1961-09-00 "The Mask of Ruby Martinson"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-09-00 "The Firing Line"

                     Playboy

1961-09-00 "Blood Bargain"

                     Saturn Web Detective Story Magazine

1961-10-00 "Beggars Can Be Chosen"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-10-00 "The Painless Method"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-11-00 "Dead Give-Away"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-11-00 "Thicker Than Water"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1961-11-00 "The Last Smile"

                     Playboy

1961-11-07 "The Living End"

                     Fantastic

1962-00-00 "Keep Me Company"

                     A Crime for Mothers and Others

1962-00-00 "Servant Problem"

                     A Crime for Mothers and Others

1962-00-00 "And Beauty the Prize"

                     A Crime for Mothers and Others

1962-00-00 "The Old Man"

                     The Diners Club Magazine

1962-00-00 "The Penalty"

                     Microcosmic Tales

1962-00-00 "A Woman’s Help"

                     A Crime for Mothers and Others

1962-01-00 "Be My Valentine"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1962-01-00 "The Truth"

                     Off Campus—Extracurricular Entertainment

1962-01-00 "The Hands of Mrs. Mallory"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1962-01-00 "One Step to Hell!"

                     Keyhole Detective Stories

1962-02-00 "Museum Piece"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1962-02-00 "The Cure"

                     The Diners’ Club Magazine

1962-02-00 "Suicide Marathon"

                     Trapped Detective Story Magazine

1962-03-00 "Solo for Violin"

                     Playboy

1962-03-00 "The Lady and the Boy"

                     The Dude

1962-04-00 "A Way to Make It"

                     Playboy

1962-05-00 "Ruby Martinson’s Great Fur Robbery"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1962-07-00 "Item"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1962-07-00 "Blackmailer"

                     The Saint Mystery Magazine

1962-08-00 "Murder Delayed"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1962-08-00 "Good Morning, This Is the Future"

                     Rogue

1962-09-00 "Chip on Black 13"

                     Argosy (UK)

1962-09-00 "Mr. Justice"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1962-10-00 "Whosit’s Disease"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1962-10-00 "Light Fingers"

                     Cavalier

1962-10-00 "Three Letters From Hollywood"

                     Rogue

1962-10-25 "Hiding Out"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1962-11-00 "Weep for the Guilty"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1962-11-00 "Confessions of a Talking Dog"

                     Adam Bedside Reader #11

1962-11-00 "Under the Covers"

                     Adam Bedside Reader #11

1962-12-00 "How to Stop Smoking"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1963-00-00 "The Witness"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1963-01-00 "The Glowworm"

                     Playboy

1963-01-00 "The Colonel’s House"

                     Swank

1963-01-00 "Way-Station"

                     The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction

1963-03-00 "A Day Off"

                     Knight

1963-03-00 "The Valley of Good News"

                     The Dude

1963-04-00 "Starring the Defense"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1963-05-00 "Sea of Troubles"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1963-05-00 "Jobo"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1963-06-00 "The Wish-Giver"

                     Rogue

1963-12-00 "A Note on American Literature by My Uncle, Monroe Sanderson"

                     The Diners Club Magazine

1963-12-00 "Sword of the Sultan"

                     Adam Bedside Reader 1963 #12

1964-01-00 "The Return of the Moresbys"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1964-02-00 "Second Verdict"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1964-02-00 "Beside the Golden Door"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1964-03-00 "The Last Word in Coloring Books"

                     Knight

1964-04-00 "Prisoner in Orbit"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1964-04-00 "The Chair"

                     Amazing Science Fiction Stories

1964-04-00 "Federal Offense"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1964-05-00 "The Horse That Wasn't for Sale"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1964-05-15 "Goodbye Charlie"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1964-09-00 "The Chinaman Button"

                     Ace

1964-09-00 "Tony’s Death"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1964-09-00 "Three Miles to Marleybones"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1964-11-00 "The Knocking in the Castle"

                     Fantastic

1964-11-00 "Sick Joke on Stanley"

                     Debonair

1965-00-00 "Speak"

                     The Diners Club Magazine

1965-00-00 "My Mother the Ghost"

                     The Diners Club Magazine

1965-01-00 "The Old Ones Are Hard to Kill"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1965-02-00 "The Ring of Truth"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1965-04-00 "Gomber’s Army"

                     The Dude

1965-08-00 "Melodramine"

                     Playboy

1965-10-00 "One of Those Days"

                     The Saint Mystery Magazine

1965-10-00 "The Rats of Dr. Picard"

                     Bizarre Mystery Magazine

1966-00-00 "The Last Word"

                     Reveille

1966-03-00 "A Choice of Witnesses"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1966-03-00 "I Remember Oblivion"

                     The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction

1966-11-00 "The Cop Who Loved Flowers"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1967-00-00 "Ersatz"

                     Dangerous Visions

1967-02-00 "The Diagnosis"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1967-04-00 "The Bluff"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1967-07-00 "The Prisoner"

                     Playboy

1967-08-00 "Cop in a Rocker"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1967-09-00 "The Man With the Green Eyes"

                     Ace

1968-06-00 "The House on Damn Street"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1968-07-00 "You Can Bet on Ruby Martinson"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1968-09-00 "Don’t I Know You?"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1968-09-00 "The Moving Finger Types"

                     The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction

1968-10-00 "The Job"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1968-11-00 "An Affair of the Heart"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1968-11-00 "Death of the Kerry Blue"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1968-12-00 "Ball of the Centuries"

                     Fantastic

1969-02-00 "Death of a General"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1969-06-00 "I Do Not Like Thee, Dr. Feldman"

                     Playboy

1969-07-00 "Bones"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1969-08-00 "Sea Change"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1969-09-00 "Eulogy in a Phone Booth"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1970-00-00 "The Slave"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Tales to Make Your Teeth Chatter (1980)

1970-08-00 "The Gourmet"

                     Playboy

1970 Spring "Cry, Baby, Cry"

                     Startling Mystery Stories

1972-00-00 "A Different Line of Work"

                     Over the Edge

1972-12-00 "The Loan"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1973-03-00 "The Intruder"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1973-07-00 "The Girl Who Found Things"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1974-02-00 "The Seersucker Heart"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1974-02-00 "The Gourmet"

                     Playboy

1974-02-00 "Thou Shalt Not"

                     Charlie Chan Mystery Magazine

1974-04-00 "Happiness Before Death"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1974-04-00 "The Haunted Man"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1974-06-00 "The Poisoned Pawn"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1974-0800   "The Memory Expert"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1975-01-00 "The Kidnaping"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1975-0400   "The Bottom Dollar"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1975-08-00 "The Rise and Fall of the Fourth Reich"

                     The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction

1977-00-00 "Just Like Her"

                     Schlimme Geschichten fur schlaue Leser

1979-07-00 "The Kindest Man in the World"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Anthology #60

1980-04-23 "The Game As It Is Played"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1981-00-00 "I Like It Here in Wilmington"

                     Coole Geschichten fur clevere Leser

1982-00-00 "Prez"

                     Terrors

1982-01-27 "Bottom Line"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1982-03-24 "The Contessa Collection"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1983-09-00 "The Bracelet"

                     Mike Shayne MM

1984-06-00 "The Tin Man"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1986-08-00 "The Bottle"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1987-00-00 "The Amateur Filmmaker"

                     Frisch gewagt ist halb gemordet

1987-04-14 "Mama’s Secret"

                     Woman’s World

1987-07-00 "A Pair of Eyes"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1987-11-00 "Harley’s Destiny"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1988-00-00 "Act of Mercy"

                     Das Morden ist des Morders Lust

1989-00-00 "The Man Who Loved Christmas"

                     Mistletoe Mysteries 1989

1989-00-00 "Murder in Blue and Gray"

                     Mr. President, Private Eye

1989-00-00 "The Phantom of the Soap Opera"

                     Phantoms

1989-00-00 "Bats"

                     The Further Adventures of Batman

1989-04-00 "Possession"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1990-00-00 "Dick Tracy and the Syndicate of Death"

                     Anthology: Dick Tracy: The Secret Files 1990

1990-00-00 "The Fifty-Third Card"

                     The Further Adventures of The Joker

1990-00-00 "Honey Suit"

                     Gauntlet Magazine

1990-06-00 "Hanged for a Sheep"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1991-06-00 "Deuce"

                     The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction

1991-11-00 "Home Again"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1991-12-mid What Do I Do About Dora?

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

1992-00-00 "The Assassin From MVX-TV"

                     Teuflische Gschichten fur tapfere Leser (Diogenes)

1992-07-00 "A Letter Too Late"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1993-00-00 "I, Monster"

                     Journeys to the Twilight Zone 1993

1993-00-00 "I Now Pronounce You Superman and Wife"

                     The Further Adventures of Superman

1993-00-00 "Behind the Screen"

                     The Further Adventures of Wonder Woman

1993-03-00 "The High Price of Amazonas"

                     New Mystery

1993-11-00 "Happen to Anyone"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1993-12-00 "The Inside Track"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1994-00-00 "The Operation"

                     Murder Is My Business

1994-02-00 "The Deal"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1994-03-00 "Breaking and Entering"

                     New Mystery

1994-05-00 "The Other Woman"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1995 Spring "The Acrostic Mystery"

                     Based on "The Case of the Secret Sorrow"

                     New Mystery Magazine

1996-00-00 "The Case of the Notorious Canary Trainer"

                     Resurrected Holmes 1996

1996-04-00 "The Theft"

                     New Mystery

1998 Fall     "Boredom"

                     The Strand Magazine

1999-00-00 "The Darlington Substitution Scandal"

                     The Confidential Casebook of Sherlock Holmes

1999-07,09 "Life Sentences"

                     HMS Beagle

1999-00-00 "Untitled"

                     Mein Vater, der Kater

2000-03-00 "The Museum"

                     Fantasy & Science Fiction

2000-08,09 "How I Spent My Summer Vacation"

                     Futures

2000-12-00 "Outsourcing"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

2000-00-00 "Cancel My Suicide"

                     Das todliche telefon

2000-00-00 "Home Again"

                     Das todliche telefon

2000-00-00  "My Totga"

                     Das todliche telefon

2000-00-00 "The Abduction"

                     Das todliche telefon

2000-00-00  "The Cleaning Lady"

                     Das todliche telefon

2000-00-00 "Where Love Lies"

                     Das todliche telefon

2001-00-00 "Killing Teddy Ballgame"

                     Based on "Kill the Umpire!"

                     Murderer’s Row—Baseball Mysteries

2001-01-00 "The Dinner Party"

                     The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction

2001-01-03 "The Houdini Homicide"

                     About Mysteries

2001-04-00 "Lucrezia and the Thief"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

2001-05-00 "The Housebreakers"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

2001-06-00 "Light Switch, Mirror, Stairs"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

2001-06,07 "Abigail"

                     Futures: Short Tales for Story Lovers,07

2001-12-00 "Luck"

                     Futures: Short Tales for Story Lovers/2002-01

2002-00-00 "Change Partners"

                     Death Dance 2002

2002-00-00 "The Sitting Duck"

                     Babyboom

2002-00-00 "Baby Boom"

                     Babyboom

2002-00-00 "Payment Due"

                     Babyboom

2002-00-00 "Double Cross"

                     Based on "Sea of Troubles"

                     Babyboom

2002-00-00 "The Haunting of Penthouse D"

                     Babyboom

2002-00-00 "The Slaying of Santa Claus"

                     Babyboom

2002-06-00 "A Mother’s Kiss"

                     Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine

2002-09,10 "The Discount Club"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

2003-00-00 "The Day of the 31st"

                     Blood on Their Hands 2003

 Puzzles

1983-00-00 "Mystery Acrostic"

                     Mystery Writers Annual 1983

1985-00-00 "The Case of the Miserly Murderer"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "It’s a Matter of Perfect Timing"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "But Who Said Diamonds Are Forever?"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Broken String of Pearls"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Ace in the Hole or Hole in the Ace"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "A Murder in a Very Quiet Room"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Murder in A Flat and in B Flat"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Vaudeville Is Dead and So Is Joey"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Curse of Absentmindedness"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Last of Mr. Philpott"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "This Time It Wasn’t a Cat Burglar"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Case of the Nervous Runaway"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The High Fashion Murder Case"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Inspector Cross Makes a Catch"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Strange Case of Peter Funk"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Dead Man: Please Do Not Disturb"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Man Who Took It With Him"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "For Death of Auld Lang Syne"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Art of Stealing Paintings"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Mystery of the Broken Vase"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Some Children Should Be Heard"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "How a Bookkeeper Gets Booked"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Murder Is the Big League Game"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Murder in the Roaring Twenties"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Insurance Is the Best Policy"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Doctor Diagnoses a Crime"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Mystery of the Missing Totem Pole"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Dumb Disguise of Dum Dum Davis"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Boy Who Broke the Windows"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "For Revenge in Another Country"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "About the Terrible Death of Ivan"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Mystery of the Missing Hand"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "One of Our Diamonds Is Missing"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Last Word in Haberdashery"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Look a Race Horse in the Mouth"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Case of the Deadly Disc Jockey"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Inspector Reports a Crime"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "A Ten Thousand Dollar Phone Call"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "The Case of the Malevolent Machinist"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1985-00-00 "Santa Claus and the Locked Room"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Acrostic Mysteries

1989-00-00 "The Gibson Mystery Acrostic Puzzle"

                     Mystery Writers Annual 1989

1991-00-00 "Cook Your Goose"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Bad Egg"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Fileted Finalé"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Out on a Limb"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Just Under the Wire"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Paint the Town Red"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Disappearing, Inc."

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Coffin Cold"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Prescription for Murder"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Infectious Condition"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Pay Through the Nose"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Shear Larceny"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Shop ‘Til You Drop"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Going, Going, Gone!"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Left Holding the Bag"

                     w/Acrostic Crossword

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Spill the Beans"

                     w/Crossword Puzzle

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "Murder on the Books"

                     w/Crossword Puzzle

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "A Taste of Murder"

                     w/Word Find Puzzle

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "A Shot in the Arm"

                     w/Word Find Puzzle

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 "The $64 Question"

                     w/Word Find Puzzle

                     Inspector Cross Volume 1

1991-00-00 Inspector Cross Volume 2 (20 stories w/Acrostic Crossword)

                     Titles to come

1994-06-00 "The Final Paragraph—Amos's Last Words"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1994-09-00 "The Final Paragraph—One More Question"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1994-10-00 "The Final Paragraph—Murder on the Internet"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1994-12-15 "The Final Paragraph—The Last Battlefield"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1995-07-00 "The Final Paragraph—800-Pound Gorilla"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1995-09-00 "The Final Paragraph—Killing With Calories"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1995-10-00 "The Final Paragraph—Out of the Woods"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1995-10-00 "Out of the Woods"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1995-11-00 "The Final Paragraph—Door to Door"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1996-02-00 "The Final Paragraph—The Best Disguise"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1996-06-00 "The Final Paragraph—Good for the Soul"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1996-09,10 "Murder Set to Music"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1996-10-00 "The Final Paragraph—Murder Set to Music"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

1998-08-00 "The Final Paragraph—The Principal"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

2000-07-00 "The Final Paragraph—The Cabin Killer"

                     Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine


Television

Episodes

1957-10-27 "Heart of Gold"

                     Based on "M Is for the Many"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1957-12-29 "Night of the Execution"

                     Based on "Day of the Execution"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1958-00-00 "The Trouble With Ruth"

                     Based on "The Trouble With Ruth"

                     Schlitz Playhouse

1958-00-00 "Bons Amigos"

                     TV Teatro (Brazil)

1958-00-00 "The Man in the Mirror"

                     Based on "The Man in the Mirror"

                     77 Sunset Strip

1958-02-16 "On the Nose"

                     Based on "Something Short of Murder"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1958-03-09 "The Right Kind of House"

                     Based on "The Right Kind of a House"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1959-00-00 "Symbol of Authority"

                     Based on "Symbol of Authority"

                     Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse

1959-01-11 "The Morning After"

                     Based on "The Morning After"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1959-03-08 "The Right Price"

                     Based on "Make Me an Offer"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1959-03-29 "The Kind Waitress"

                     Based on "The Case of the Kind Waitress"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1959-05-10 "A Night With the Boys"

                     Based on "A Fistful of Money"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1960-00-00 "A Cry From the Penthouse"

                     Based on "A Cry From the Penthouse"

                     Markham

1960-02-07 "Not the Running Type"

                     Based on "Not the Running Type"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1960-04-24 "40 Detectives Later"

                     Based on "Forty Detectives Later"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1960-05-08 "Sleep Is for the Innocent"

                     Based on "Insomnia"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1960-05-22 "One Grave Too Many"

                     Based on "One Grave Too Many"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1960-05-29 "Party Line"

                     Based on "The Deadly Telephone"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1960-11-01 "Pen Pal"

                     Based on "Pen Pal"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1960-11-29 "The Money"

                     Based on "Trust Me, Mr. Paschetti"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1960-12-13 "The Man With Two Faces"

                     Based on "The Man With Two Faces"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-01-24 "A Crime for Mothers"

                     Based on "A Crime for Mothers"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-01-31 "The Last Escape"

                     Based on "The Last Escape"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-02-28 "The Throwback"

                     Based on "And Beauty the Prize"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-03-14 "The Horseplayer"

                     Based on "Father Amion’s Long Shot"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-03-21 "Incident in a Small Jail"

                     Based on "The Man in the Next Cell"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-03-28 "A Woman's Help"

                     Based on "A Woman's Help"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-06-06 "Servant Problem"

                     Based on "Servant Problem"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-06-13 "Coming Home"

                     Based on "You Can't Blame Me"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-10-10 "The Hat Box"

                     Based on "Murder Out of a Hat"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-10-31 "Cop for a Day"

                     Based on "Cop for a Day"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-11-07 "Keep Me Company"

                     Based on "Keep Me Company"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1961-12-19 "The Right Kind of Medicine"

                     Based on "Never Cool a Cop"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-01-23 "The Case of M.J.H."

                     Based on "The Case of M.J.H."

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-02-02 "The Test"

                     Based on "Thicker Than Water"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-02-27 "Burglar Proof"

                     Based on "Be My Valentine"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-03-27 "The Last Remains"

                     Based on "Dead Give-Away"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-04-17 "The Kerry Blue"

                     Based on "Death of the Kerry Blue"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-04-24 "The Matched Pearl"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-05-08 "Most Likely to Succeed"

                     Based on "Beggars Can Be Chosen"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-05-22 "The Opportunity"

                     Based on "Golden Opportunity" by J.W. Aaron

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-06-12 "First Class Honeymoon"

                     Based on "First-Class Honeymoon"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents

1962-10-11 "I Saw the Whole Thing"

                     Based on Independent Witness by Henry Cecil

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1962-10-25 "Final Vow"

                     Based on "Hiding Out"

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1962-11-08 "House Guest"

                     Based on The Golden Deed by Andrew Garve

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1963-00-00 "The Old Man in the Cave"

                     Based on "The Old Man"

                     The Twilight Zone

1963-01-11 "What Really Happened"

                     Based on What Really Happened by Marie Belloc Lowndes

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1963-10-25 "Blood Bargain"

                     Based on "Blood Bargain"

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1963-11-15 "Starring the Defense"

                     Based on "Starring the Defense"

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1964-00-00 "The Self Improvement of Salvadore Ross"

                     Based on "The Self Improvement of Salvadore Ross"

                     The Twilight Zone

1964-03-27 "Behind the Locked Door"

                     Based on "Behind the Locked Door"

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1964-05-15 "Who Needs an Enemy?"

                     Based on "Goodbye Charlie"

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1964-05-29 "The Second Verdict"

                     Based on "Second Verdict"

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1964-06-05 "Isabel"

                     Based on Isabel by S.B. Hough

                     The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

1965-00-00 "The Virtue Affair"

                     The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

1966-00-00 "Ma Parker"

                     Batman

1966-00-00 "The Greatest Mother of Them All"

                     Batman

1967-00-00 "The Assassin"

                     Run for Your Life

1966-00-00 "The Bridge of Lions Affair: Part I"

                     Based on "The Bridge of Lions"

                     The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

1966-00-00 "The Bridge of Lions Affair: Part II"

                     Based on "The Bridge of Lions"

                     The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

1966-00-00 "The Day Time Stopped"

                     Run for Your Life

1966-00-00 "The Sex Object"

                     Run for Your Life

1966-00-00 "The Grotenberg Mask"

                     Based on "Sea of Troubles"

                     Run for Your Life

1966-00-00 "The Cruel Fountain"

                     Based on "The Hands of Mrs. Mallory"

                     Run for Your Life

1966-00-00 "The Round Table Affair"

                     The Man From U.N.C.L.E.

1967-00-00 "At the End of the Rainbow There’s Another Rainbow"

                     Run for Your Life

1968-00-00 "The Frame-Up"

                     Garrison’s Gorillas

1969-00-00 "Next Week, East Lynne"

                     Here Come the Brides

1969-10-03 "Blind Man’s Bluff"

                     Based on "The Bluff"

                     The Name of the Game

1969-12-19 "Laurie Marie"

                     The Name of the Game

1970-03-27 "Jenny Wilde Is Drowning"

                     The Name of the Game

1972-00-00 "Half a Death"

                     Based on "Half a Death"

                     Ghost Story (aka Circle of Fear)

1974-00-00 "Reunion in Terror"

                     McMillan & Wife

1974-00-00 "The Haunting of Penthouse D"

                     Based on "The Haunting of Penthouse D"

                     The Wide World of Mystery

1975-00-00 "Please Call It Murder"

                     The Wide World of Mystery

1976-00-00 "Re: The Secret"

                     Executive Suite

1976-00-00 "Re: The Trap"

                     Executive Suite

1981-00-00 "A Woman’s Help"

                     Based on "A Woman’s Help"

                     Tales of the Unexpected

1982-00-00 "Operation Safecrack"

                     Based on "Be My Valentine"

                     Tales of the Unexpected

1982-00-00 "Light Fingers"

                     Based on "Light Fingers"

                     Tales of the Unexpected

1983-00-00 "The Memory Man"

                     Based on "The Memory Expert"

                     Tales of the Unexpected

1984-00-00 "I Like It Here in Wilmington"

                     Based on "I Like It Here in Wilmington"

                     Tales of the Unexpected

1984-00-00 "The Dirty Detail"

                     Based on "The Dirty Detail"

                     Tales of the Unexpected

1985-00-00 "Deadly Honeymoon"

                     Based on "Deadly Honeymoon"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents (Reboot)

1985-00-00 "Incident in a Small Jail" (Segment)

                     Based on "The Man in the Next Cell"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents (Reboot)

1985-00-00 "The Right Kind of Medicine"

                     Based on "Never Cool a Cop"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents (Reboot)

1985-00-00 "Examination Day" (segment)

                     Based on "Examination Day"

                     The Twilight Zone Reboot

1985-00-00 "Het bloed kruipt"

                     Dutch TV

1988-10-15 "Pen Pal"

                     Based on "Pen Pal"

                     Alfred Hitchcock Presents (Reboot)

1995-00-00 "Ein Mordsgeschaft"

                     Mordslust

                     German TV

1997-00-00 "Parkhotel Stern"

                     German TV

 

Series

1982-00-00 Die Krimistunde (The Crime Hour)

                     German TV

                     Unknown number of episodes

1979-00-00 Parole Chicago

                     Based on Ruby Martinson Stories

                     13 episodes

1971-1972   Somerset

                     Head Writer

                     Episodes 221-1508

1976-1977   Executive Suite

                     Head Writer (possibly fired midway through)

                     Episodes 1-19

1977-1978   Search for Tomorrow

                     Head Writer

                     95 Episodes

1982-1983   One Life to Live

                     Head Writer

                     Unknown number of episodes

1984-1986   Capital

                     Head Writer

                     Unknown number of episodes

1967-1983   The Edge of Night

                     Head Writer

                     3890 Episodes

2000-2001   Love Kills

                     MysteryNet.com

                     Unknown number of episodes

1978-1982   Erlesne Verbrechen und makellose Morde (Exquisite Crimes and Immaculate Murders)

                     Based on his stories

                     German TV

 

About/References to Henry Slesar

Advertising announcement

1964-10-20 Addenda

                     New York Times

 

Articles

1971-12-00 "The Writer With the Largest Audience in America"

                     TV Guide

1979-09-00 "Revealed! Serial Writers’ Secrets"

                     We Love Soaps

1980-09-16 "Henry Slesar: Man of Mystery"

                     Soap Opera Digest

1982-00-00 "Simon Says...Intrigue!"

                     TV Guide

1983-00-00 "A Choice of Witnesses Filmmaker Commentary"

                     Website

1983-04-17 "Sometimes a TV Character Steps Out—And Stays Out"

                     New York Times

1990-08-05 "New Play Listing: The Veil"

                     New York Times

1993-00-autumn "The Short Fiction of Henry Slesar"

                     Foundation

2001-07-00 "Henry Slesar in Paperback"

                     Paperback Parade

2002-04-06 Paid Death Notice

                     New York Times

2002-11-00  "Henry Slesar: An Appreciation"

                     Paperback Parade

2022-10-20 "Henry Slesar" by Russell Atwood

                     Somethingisgoingtohappen.net

2000-00-00 "An Interview With Henry Slesar"

                     Futures: Short Tales for Story Lovers, 2001-01

 

Interviews

2000-00-00 Interview

                     Futures: Short Tales for Story Lovers

2001-07-00 Interview

                     Paperback Parade

 

Intro

1971-00-00 Intro to Survivor #1 by Harlan Ellison

                     Partners in Wonder

 

Play Promo Website

1998-10-21 The Four Cornered Couch

                     ACT Theatre

 

Reviews

Books

1974-12-15 The Thing at the Door

                     New York Times

1999-03-07 Murder at Heartbreak Hospital

                     New York Times

 

Movies

1964-05-14 The Eyes of Annie Jones

                     New York Times

1965-01-14 Two on a Guillotine

                     New York Times

1972-02-03 Murders in the Rue Morgue

                     New York Times

1992-04-04 Principal Purrs in 'Seduction' Stories

                     Los Angeles Times

 

Plays

1991-03-10 He Had a Hat

                     New York Times

1992-09-13 The Veil

                     New York Times

1998-10-21 The Four Cornered Couch: Poor Man’s Wood

                     The Buzz

 

Radio

1994-04-11 "The Case of Ray Collins"

                     Based on "Pen Pal"

                     Tydenik Rozhlas (Radio Weekly)

                     Czech Newspaper

 

Jigsaw Puzzles

1974-02-00 "The Case of the Snoring Skinflint"

                     The Armchair Detective

1974-08-00 "The Case of His Headless Highness"

                     The Armchair Detective

1974-08-00 "The Case of the Shaky Showman"

                     The Armchair Detective