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The fruit at the bottom of the bowl / Ray Bradbury
Murder! / Arnold Bennett
The kennel / Maurice Level
We knows you're busy writing / Edmund Crispin
A thousand deaths / Jack London
Back for Christmas / John Collier
Before the party / W. Somerset Maugham
[Tell-tale Heart](https://openlibrary.org/works/OL41059W) / Edgar Allan Poe
The evidence of the alter-boy / Georges Simenon
The hand / Guy de Maupassant
Tickled to death / Simon Brett
Miss Marple tells a story / Agatha Christie
Browdean Farm / A.M. Burrage
A nice touch / Mann Rubin
Light verse / Isaac Asimov
Composed of cobwebs / Eddy C. Bertin
[The Boscombe Valley mystery](https://openlibrary.org/works/OL14930212W) / Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
The man who knew how / Dorothy L. Sayers
The hands of Mr. Ottermole / Thomas Burke
You got to have brains / Robert Bloch
How the third floor knew the Potteries / Amelia B. Edwards
The invisible man / G.K. Chesterton
The hound / William Faulkner
Three is a lucky number / Margery Allingham
First hate / Algernon Blackwood
The victim / P.D. James
The mistery of the sleeping-car express / Freeman Wills Crofts
Moxon's master / Ambrose Bierce
The basket chair / Winston Graham
The drop of blood / Mor Jokai
About the Author
Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury is one of those rare individuals whose writing has changed the way people think. His more than five hundred published works -- short stories, novels, plays, screenplays, television scripts, and verse -- exemplify the American imagination at its most creative.
Once read, his words are never forgotten. His best-known and most beloved books, *The Martian Chronicles*, *The Illustrated Man*, *Fahrenheit 451* and *Something Wicked This Way Comes*, are masterworks that readers carry with them over a lifetime. His timeless, constant appeal to audiences young and old has proven him to be one of the truly classic authors of the 20th Century -- and the 21st.
In recognition of his stature in the world of literature and the impact he has had on so many for so many years, Bradbury was awarded the National Book Foundation's 2000 Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, an the National Medal of Arts in 2004.
([Source][1])
[1]: http://www.raybradbury.com/about.html