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Robert L. Fish
[1912-1981] |
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Captain Jose da Silva, a supercop in Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil: |
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The
Fugitive (1962)
Isle of the Snakes (1963)
The Shrunken Head (1963)
Brazilian
Sleigh Ride (1965)
The Diamond Bubble (1965) |
Always
Kill a Stranger (1967)
The Bridge That Went Nowhere (1968)
The Xavier Affair (1969)
The Green Hell Treasure (1971)
Trouble in Paradise (1975) |
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Kek Huuygens, a Polish smuggler using a
Dutch name and an American passport, in Europe: |
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The Hochmann Miniatures (1967)
Whirligig (1970)
The Tricks of the Trade (1972) |
The Wager (1974)
Kek
Huuygens, the Smuggler (1976) |
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Carruthers, Simpson, and Biggs, elderly
down-on-their-luck mystery writers, putting their plots into action, in The Murder League Trilogy: |
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The
Murder League (1968)
Rub-a-Dub-Dub (1971)
APA: Death Cuts the Deck (1972) |
A
Gross Carriage of Justice (1979) |
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Schlock Homes of 211B Bagel Street, a Sherlockian
pastiche with a Yiddish perspective, in London, England: |
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The Incredible Schlock Homes
(1974) |
The Memoirs of Schlock Homes
(1974) |
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Non-series: |
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The
Assassination Bureau, Ltd.1 (1963)
The Trials of O’Brien (1965)
A Handy Death (1973) |
Pursuit (1978)
The
Gold of Troy (1980)
Rough Diamond (1981) |
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Written as Robert L. Pike
Lieutenant Clancy, a no nonsense, honest cop in New York City: |
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Mute Witness (1963)
APA: Bullitt (1968)
The Quarry (1964) |
Police Blotter (1965) |
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Written as Robert L.
Pike
Jim Reardon, a no nonsense, honest cop in San Francisco, California,
an incarnation of the character in the “Bullitt” movie: |
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Reardon (1970)
The Gremlin’s Grampa (1972) |
Bank Job (1974)
Deadline 2 A.M. (1976) |
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