Long Time No See
Paperback)
87th Precinct #32Ed McBain
ISBN: | 9780553231304 |
Publisher: | Bantam Books |
Published: | 1 November, 1982 |
Format: | Paperback |
Editions: |
12 other editions
of this product
|
- 1 Cop Hater
- 2 The Mugger
- 4 The Con Man
- 5 Killer's Choice
- 6 Killer's Payoff
- 7 Lady killer
- 8 Killer's Wedge
- 9 'Til Death
- 11 Give the Boys a Great Big Hand
- 12 Heckler
- 14 Lady, Lady I Did It
- 15 The Empty Hours
- 16 Like Love
- 17 Ten plus one
- 18 Ax
- 19 He Who Hesitates
- 20 Doll
- 22 Fuzz
- 24 Jigsaw
- 25 Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here!
- 26 Let's Hear It for the Deaf Man
- 27 Sadie When She Died
- 28 Hail to the chief
- 29 Bread
- 31 So Long as You Both Shall Live
- 32 Long Time No See
- 33 Calypso
- 34 Ghosts
- 35 Heat
- 36 Ice
- 37 Lightning
- 38 Eight Black Horses
- 39 Poison
- 40 Tricks
- 41 Lullaby
- 42 Vespers
- 43 widows
- 45 Mischief and Widows
- 46 Romance
- 47 Nocturne
- 48 The Big Bad City
- 50 Money, Money, Money
- 52 Frumious Bandersnatch
- 53 Hark!
- 54 Fiddlers
- And All through the House
- Blood Relatives
- Bread;
- Calypso
- Eighty Million Eyes
- Fat Ollie's Book
- Fat Ollie's Book
- Fat Ollie's Book: A Novel of the 87th Precinct
- Heat
- Killer's Payoff
- King's Ransom
- Kiss
- Kiss: A Novel of the 87th Precinct
- Lullaby
- Mischief / Widows
- Nocturne
- Poison
- Romance
- See them die
- Shotgun
- Shotgun
- The Empty Hours
- The Frumious Bandersnatch
- The Heckler
- The Last Dance: A Novel of the 87th Precinct
- The Pusher
- The SE BIG BAD CITY
- Tricks
Long Time No See
Paperback)
87th Precinct #32Ed McBain
Stephen King and Nelson DeMille on Ed McBain I think Evan Hunter, known by that name or as Ed McBain, was one of the most influential writers of the postwar generation. He was the first writer to successfully merge realism with genre fiction, and by so doing I think he may actually have created the kind of popular fiction that drove the best-seller lists and lit up the American imagination in the years 1960 to 2000. Books as disparate as The New Centurions, The Friends of Eddie Coyle, The Godfather, Black Sunday, and The Shining all owe a debt to Evan Hunter, who taught a whole generation of baby boomers how to write stories that were not only entertaining but that truthfully reflected the times and the culture. He will be remembered for bringing the so-called "police procedural" into the modern age, but he did so much more than that. And he was one hell of a nice man. --Stephen KingWay back in the mid-1970s, when I was a new writer and police series were very big, my editor asked me to do a series called Joe Ryker, NYPD. I had no idea how to write a police detective novel, but the editor han
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