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         Queen Ellery:     more books (100)
  1. The Four of Hearts: An Ellery Queen Mystery by Ellery Queen, 1994-01
  2. The Hollywood Murders:The Devil to Pay; The Four of Hearts; The Origin of Evil by Ellery Queen, 1957
  3. Wife or Death and The Golden Goose (A Signet Double Mystery) by Ellery Queen, 1978-06-06
  4. Ellery Queen's Windows of Mystery (Curley Large Print Books) by Ellery Queen, 1994-10
  5. Ellery Queen's a Multitude of Sins by Ellery Queen, 1988-09
  6. The bizarre murders: Three mysteries in one volume, complete and unabridged: The Siamese twin mystery; The Chinese orange mystery; the Spanish cape mystery by Ellery Queen, 1962
  7. The Spanish Cape Mystery (Signet) by Ellery Queen, 1983-07-05
  8. DOUBLE, DOUBLE by Ellery Queen, 1983-05-12
  9. Ellery Queen's Japanese Golden Dozen: The Detective Story World in Japan by V. Rutland, 1978-05
  10. The Siamese Twin Mystery (Otto Penzler's Classic American Mystery Library) by Ellery Queen, 1993-11
  11. Queen's Ransom: The Roman Hat Mystery; Calamity Town; Cat of Many Tails (Mystery Guild Lost Classics Omnibus) by Ellery Queen, Manfred B. Lee, et all 2005
  12. House of Darkness by Ellery Queen, 2010-09-20
  13. Ellery Queen's Crime Carousel by Ellery Queen, 1967
  14. Murder Most British: Stories from Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine (Dead Letter Mysteries)

21. Literary Stamps: Queen, Ellery ( Frederic Dannay & Manfred Bennington Lee)
queen, ellery ( Frederic Dannay Manfred Bennington Lee). added 5/04/2007 Newer Post Older Post Home. About Me. My Photo. jgodsey
http://literarystamps.blogspot.com/2007/05/queen-ellery-frederic-dannay-manfred.
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22. Index To Comic Art Collection: "Quasar" To "Queen Moustoria"
queen, ellery. The Celebrated Cases of Dick Tracy, 19311951 / Chester Gould ; edited by Herb Galewitz ; introduction by ellery queen.
http://www.lib.msu.edu/comics/rri/qrri/quas.htm
Michigan State University Libraries
Special Collections Division
Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection
"Quasar" to "Queen Moustoria" Back to the Q index screen.
Back to the
...
Back up the list
- Quasar. Entry (v. 3, p. 187) in Dictionnaire Encyclopédique de Héros et Auteurs de BD, by Henri Filippini (Grenoble : Glénat, 2000). Belgian series by Lamquet. Call no.: PN6707.F5 1998 v.3 -
Quasar
Quasimodo
Title character in The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Also a pseudonym used by Italian writer Tiziano Sclavi.
Les 4 As
Belgian kid adventure series by François Craenhals and Georges Chaulet
Quayle, Dan, 1947-
One-time Vice-President of the United States
Quebec
Queen, Ellery
The Queen Bee
Supervillainess, orginating against the Justice League of America
On down the list
This segment last edited August 1, 2004

23. Ellery Queen - Books For Sale - Free Delivery
queen, ellery. Pseudonym for the cousins Frederic Dantiay and Manfred B. Lee; also wrote as Barnaby Ross. Americans. DANNAV, Frederic Born Daniel Nathan in
http://www.detective-fiction.com/ellery-queen.htm
Ellery Queen
Detective Fiction Books for Sale
If you are interested in any of the books below you can use one of three options;
Click Buy Secure to order instantly or click Enquire for email enquiries
You can also use the online Shopping Cart facility which is perhaps best suited for multiple orders
Prices charged in UK £ sterling, all $ costs are an approximate guide due to continual rate changes
Information on descriptions and condition here The Four of Hearts - Ellery Queen
1939 UK hardback first edition, first impression, Gollancz, London
A VG+ book in VG+ unclipped dust wrapper
Book shows no names, inscriptions etc, tighly bound and square, clean contents and cloth
The dustwrapper has just very shallow wear to spine ends and some tanning to spine
A nice 'fat' format 7/6 book
Very uncommon in this condition For Sale at £SOLD (approx $SOLD) * - free delivery worldwide ! Buy Secure Enquire or Add to Cart The Roman Hat Mystery - Ellery Queen 1929 UK hardback first edition, first impression, Gollancz, London A VG book sadly sans dustwrapper Book shows no names, inscriptions etc, tighly bound and square, clean contents and cloth

24. Stories, Listed By Author
The Adventure of the March of Death ellery queen, (pl) Oct 15 1939 ellery queen’s Faces of Mystery, ed. ellery queen, Curley Publishing 1992
http://www.philsp.com/homeville/MSF/s170.htm
Mystery Short Fiction: 1990-2006
Stories, Listed by Author
Previous Table-of-Contents
QUEEN, ELLERY ; pseudonym of Frederic Dannay Manfred B. Lee (books) (chron.) ...

25. Ellery Queen Books
Ming books deal in ellery queen books. ming books specialise in crime, murder and mystery books.
http://www.mingbooks.supanet.com/ellery_queen_books.htm
MING BOOKS
Ellery Queen Books
Please contact Ming Books if you need any further information
regarding any of the Ellery Queen books or if you are searching
for Ellery Queen books not listed here.
Contact Ming Books

22404_1267 QUEEN Ellery, Calamity Town
Very Good in Very Good cover, Paperback, Creasing to spine, Foxing to back cover.
Pan 1st edition 1960
'Branded and jailed as a murderer...'
22404_1268 QUEEN Ellery, The Finishing Stroke Good in Good cover, Penguin Paperback, Creasing to spine, Marking to cover. 1st edition 1960 'The case that almost tantalizised Ellery Queen to death...' 22404_1269 QUEEN Ellery, Halfway House Good in Good cover, Paperback, Creasing to spine, Marking to cover. Great Pan 1st edition 1959 'Ellery Queen and a million dollar corpse...'

26. Ellery Queen
Features information about the author(s) and characters. Includes a discussion board.
http://www.mysterynet.com/queen/
@import url("/includes/styles/mysterynet.css");
Ellery Queen
All about Ellery Queen, bio, links to books
Ellery Queen Let the Reader Beware! by Douglas G. Greene, about Ellery Queen and his creators, Lee and Dannay Ellery Queen Books "The Roman Hat Mystery" (1929) introduced Ellery Queen as the son of Inspector Richard Queen of the New York police department. Together, they formed a formidable crime-solving team. Inspector Queen, in his role as a policeman, collected all the clues connected with the crime in question. His son Ellery, an intellectual and writer of detective novels, would then collect and analyze the clues, ultimately solving the crime. Mystery Time Line Welcome Mystery Time Line Profiles History of the Mystery Cicero Edgar Allan Poe Sherlock Holmes ... Nancy Drew Mystery Greats Websites Agatha Christie Nancy Drew Alfred Hitchcock Charlie Chan ... Clue Chronicles This duo proved so popular that Lee and Dannay wrote 33 novels and numerous short stories starring the famous father and son team. In 1932, Lee and Dannay created another character under the pseudonym Barnaby Ross. Drury Lane, a retired Shakespearean actor who also solved crimes, was featured in four novels, but was never as popular as Ellery Queen. The concept of Ellery Queen expanded to include not only the written work, but a popular radio series, as well as several film and television projects.

27. Ellery Queen On LibraryThing | Catalog Your Books Online
Frederic Dannay (left, one half of ellery queen ) with James Yaffe, World Telegram Sun photo by Al Aumuller, 1943 (Library of Congress Prints and
http://www.librarything.com/author/queenellery
Language: English [ others

28. UKBookworld.com Old, Rare And Out-of-print Book Database
Patricia Highsmith, Nicholas Freeling, Phyllis Bentley Contribute to Edited by ellery queen Poised To Fly in ellery queen s Mystery Magazine Issue No.
http://www.ukbookworld.com/cgi-bin/search.pl?s_i_keywords=detective

29. George Kelley Paperback And Pulp Fiction Collection
queen, ellery (pseudonym of Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee). The Candy Kid. Hughes, Dorothy B. The Case of the Backward Mule. Gardner, Erle Stanley
http://libweb.lib.buffalo.edu/kelley/Kelly/KelleyBriefResults3.asp?Title2=

30. Ellery Queen First Editions, Cat Of Many Tails, Queen's Bureau Investigation, Te
Bangkok rare books has a lovely fairy tales book by Sir Arthur quillerCouch The Sleeping Beauty illustrated by Edmund Dulac, plus ellery queen first
http://www.bkkbooks.com/q-Quiller-Couch-Book.htm
Ellery Queen First Editions , Ellery Queen's Awards Tenth Series, The King is Dead, Ten Days Wonder, Sleeping Beauty illustrated by Edmund Dulac
BANGKOK RARE BOOKS
Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, The Sleeping Beauty and other Fairy Tales, illustrated by Edmund Dulac , Ellery Queen First Editions
Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch In Powder and Crinoline Illustrated by KAY NIELSEN plus The Sleeping Beauty illustrated by Edmund Dulac , plus Ellery Queen first editions, at Bangkok Rare Books.
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First Editions Ian Fleming Thunderball. The Spy Who Loved Me. You Only Live Twice. Man With The Golden Gun. ... Octopussy. Graham Greene The Man Within. Brighton Rock. The Quiet American. The End of The Affair. ... Our Man in Havana Ernest Hemingway A Farewell to Arms.

31. Queen, Ellery
Med venlig hilsen fra ellery queen 3 causerier om dedikationer i detektivfortællinger, 1958 . novellesamling ellery queen kriminalmagasin, nr 3 ;
http://bibliografi.dk/content.php?page=author&value=12449

32. ANTHOLOGY Queen, Ellery Rinehart, Gallico, Starrett, ..., THE FEMALE OF THE SPEC
ANTHOLOGY queen, ellery Rinehart, Gallico, Starrett, THE FEMALE OF THE SPECIES THE FEMALE OF THE SPECIES, LB, 1943, first edition, vg+ in near vg
http://search.abaa.org/dbp2/book1628_0190.html

B O O K D E T A I L P A G E
ANTHOLOGY Queen, Ellery Rinehart, Gallico, Starrett, ... THE FEMALE OF THE SPECIES
THE FEMALE OF THE SPECIES, L-B, 1943, first edition, vg+ in near vg dust-wrapper with some light wear and tear. Contributions by: Rinehart, Gallico, Starrett, Boucher, Christie, Jesse, Orczy, Hume, Bangs, Anderson, Wallace, et.al. The great women detectives and criminals.
Price: USD 45.00 other currencies order no. 0190 inquire
(To order this book, press this button)
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UNITED STATES OF AMERICA P: David Aronovitz Tel. (248) 651-8799 Fax (248) 651-6542 E-mail: Internet: finebooks.home.comcast.net Children’s Books, Illustrated Books, Select Non Fiction # Catalogues on request * By appointment only CONDITIONS OF SALE BOOK-PLATES, PREVIOUS OWNERS SIGNATURES, REMAINDER MARKS, PRICE CLIPPED DW'S NOT ALWAYS NOTED. PLEASE INQUIRE IF IMPORTANT TO YOUR PURCHASE. ALL BOOKS STATED "FIRST EDITION" ARE FIRST PRINTINGS AS WELL UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED. ALL BOOKS WITH "DW" (dust-wrapper) WHEN "DW" IS READ IN THE DESCRIPTION.

33. The Adventure Of The Murdered Ship By Ellery Queen The Characters
ellery queen and his father, Inspector queen, are ushered into the official s office. Both men seem puzzled, anxious, and apprehensive.
http://www.otr.com/eq_script.txt
The Adventure Of The Murdered Ship by Ellery Queen The Characters ELLERY QUEEN ..................... the detective NIKKI PORTER ........................the secretary INSPECTOR QUEEN ......... Ellery's father SGT VELIE ........... the inspector's aid HIGH OFFICIAL ............ a government man MRS BROWN ................ an American mother REV JONES ................ an American father MRS SMITH ................... an American bride SCENE 1: The private office of a high official in Washington. Ellery Queen and his father, Inspector Queen, are ushered into the official's office. Both men seem puzzled, anxious, and apprehensive. OFFICIAL: Sit down, gentlemen. SOUND: Ellery and the Inspector take chairs hesitantly. OFFICIAL: Mr. Queen, I suppose you're wondering why I asked you to come. ELLERY QUEEN: (Very regretfully) Yes, sir. An urgent summons from such a distinguished Government official as yourself, Sir - I can't imagine why I should be so honored. INSPECTOR QUEEN: Sir, I hope you don't mind my coming along with my son. I was - well, a little nervous... OFFICIAL: I quite understand, Inspector Queen; glad you came. Mr. Queen, I've summoned you to Washington to lay a very important case before you - (Quietly) the most important case you'll ever be called upon to investigate. ELLERY: I'm completely at your service. OFFICIAL: (Gravely) On a certain date - recently - a certain armed vessel of the United States was waylaid by a swarm of enemy submarines on the high seas. At exactly 5 PM three torpedoes crashed into our ship, and it sank almost immediately. The loss of American lives was considerable. ELLERY: (Low) I'm sorry to learn that, Sir. OFFICIAL: This ship was involved in an extremely important operation, gentlemen. It's loss through surprise submarine attack not only caused the deaths of a large number of American fighting men, but a war plan closely integrated with the over-all Allied strategy was licked before it got started. ELLERY: But the plan must have been a strict war department secret? OFFICIAL: (Dryly) It was even stricter than usual, Mr. Queen. Only six people knew it - and their integrity cannot possibly be questioned. Yet, the nest of enemy subs was lying in wait. INSPECTOR QUEEN: Might'n they have been there by pure accident, Sir? OFFICIAL: No, Inspector. In the naval action which followed the attack. One of the enemy subs was captured by our forces. The enemy commander has been thoroughly interrogated, his effects examined. There's no doubt that those subs had positive information. ELLERY: But if total secrecy was maintained, Sir, how did the enemy get its information? OFFICIAL: That, Mr. Queen, is why you're in Washington today. In the first place, the investigative agencies of the Government are short-handed. We can use all the expert help we can get. INSPECTOR QUEEN: And I suppose my son's reputation for solving tough problems qualifies him - eh, Sir? OFFICIAL: Very much so, Inspector. But there's still another reason I called you, Mr. Queen. ELLERY: What's that, Sir? OFFICIAL: You're involved. ELLERY: (Blankly) I beg your pardon, Sir? INSPECTOR QUEEN: (Aghast) My son's involved - in the sinking of one of our ships by the enemy? I don't get it, Sir. OFFICIAL: Neither do we, Inspector. We haven't had time to work on it. The clue reached Washington only this morning. SOUND: He hands Ellery a piece of paper. OFFICIAL: This scrap of paper, Mr. Queen, was found on the captured enemy sub commander. ELLERY: Thank you, Sir. (He examines it) But - this is fantastic! INSPECTOR QUEEN: For Pete's sake, son, what's on that paper? ELLERY: Just two words, Dad - or rather a word and an initial. (He reads aloud slowly) "Ellery Q." INSPECTOR QUEEN: Ellery Q! But - how in time did your name get on a memo in the possession of an enemy sub commander, son? ELLERY: (Grimly) I'd certainly like to find out. OFFICIAL: (Dryly amused) I take it, then, Mr. Queen, you'd welcome the opportunity to investigate this case? ELLERY: Try me, Sir! OFFICIAL: Very well. Effective immediately, consider yourself a special investigator for the United States Government. ELLERY: (Crisply) Thank you, Sir. To whom am I to report? OFFICIAL: You're accountable directly to me - Inspector, it's been a pleasure. SOUND: The inspector responds in the usual manner. OFFICIAL: Mr. Queen, good luck. ELLERY: Thank you, Sir. I'll find out how those enemy subs knew about that ship if I never solve another case in my life! SCENE 2: The Queen apartment in New York. Next day. In the apartment are Ellery Queen and his secretary, Nikki Porter. They have been talking about Ellery's new commission to solve the mystery of the torpedoed US warship. NIKKI: Do you suppose the Inspector and Sergeant Velie will get a leave of absence from the Police Department, Ellery? ELLERY: (Chuckling) I've deputized them as assistant special investigators, haven't I, Nikki? They won't have any trouble. But where are they, blast it? I can't do a thing till I get those lists! NIKKI: What lists, Ellery? SOUND: They hear the Inspector and Sergeant Velie of the Inspector's staff enter the apartment. ELLERY: Dad! Velie! Did you get it? INSPECTOR QUEEN: (Coming into the room) Here it is, son. VELIE: Just came by special courier from the War Department, Ellery. SOUND: Velie waves a sheaf of papers. NIKKI: (Sniffing) A lot of papers! Don't tell me we have to go through a batch of stuffy reports. VELIE: (Grimly) They ain't "stuffy reports," Miss Porter. NIKKI: Then what are they? INSPECTOR QUEEN: A list of the names and home addresses of the survivors, the missing - and the dead of that torpedoed American ship. ELLERY: (Crisply) All right, Dad, now we can get to work. We've got to question the families of every man on this list. INSPECTOR QUEEN: (Heavily) Yes, son. VELIE: But, Maestro, there are thousands of names here. They stretch all the way from Maine and Florida to Oregon an' California. ELLERY: There's no other way, Sergeant. Nikki! NIKKI: (Crisply) Yes, Ellery. ELLERY: Your job is to take these lists and arrange them by states and cities. Dad, you and Velie work out a practical traveling schedule for the four of us. We'll cover the entire country working West. NIKKI: But, Ellery, what do you expect to find by questioning the families of the victims? ELLERY: Clues, Nikki - clues that will tell us how the enemy knew about our warship and where to lie in wait for it! Somewhere in these names and addresses are our suspects and the solution. VELIE: And maybe the answer to that "Ellery Q" on that piece of Axis paper. That one gets me. ELLERY: Never mind that now, Sergeant. Let's get to work! SCENE 3: Mrs Brown's house in Richmond, Virginia. Some weeks later. The Queens, Nikki, and Sergeant Velie are walking up the path of a shabby little frame house. Nikki is consulting a list. NIKKI: Mrs Mary-Jane Brown - it's this house, all right. ELLERY: Mrs Brown. Widow. One son. Richmond, Virginia. VELIE: We sure are coverin' territory! How many visits does this make? NIKKI: Five hundred and forty-one, Sergeant. VELIE: And we're still on the Eastern seaboard. INSPECTOR QUEEN: I hope we have some luck with this Mrs Brown, Ellery. I can't see that we're getting anywhere at all. Not a clue so far. ELLERY: (Grimly) I told you it would be a big job, Dad. SOUND: They mount to the porch. ELLERY: Well, Sergeant, rouse Mrs Brown. SOUND: Velie wearily rings the doorbell. ELLERY: Mother of Harry Brown, Seaman Third Class, U S Navy. SOUND: The door opens. ELLERY: Mrs Brown? MRS BROWN: (She is a faded woman of southern stock, middle-aged and work-worn.) I'm Miz Brown. ELLERY: Mrs Brown, we're special investigators from Washington. MRS BROWN: Gover'ment people! Come in. SOUND: They go in and she leads the way to a dim parlor. MRS BROWN: Ain't nothin' wrong with my son, Harry? NIKKI: No, Mrs Brown. Your son's getting along fine in the hospital. MRS BROWN: Thank goodness! Gave me a start - Mah parlor's a little messy - won't y'all set? SOUND: They thank her and sit down. ELLERY: Your son, Harry, was wounded in a recent naval engagement, Mrs Brown - was quite a hero. MRS BROWN: (Proudly) I know, suh. He's a real American. INSPECTOR QUEEN: So we're just here to talk to a hero's mother. MRS BROWN: Harry's a wonderful boy, suh. Enlisted right off in the Wah. Proud? Why, suh, he thinks bein' an American sailuh is the finest thing theah is! VELIE: Ain't nothin' finer, Mrs Brown. MRS BROWN: Why, my Harry's so proud of The Manila Bay - that's his ship - he says it's the best ship in the Navy. INSPECTOR QUEEN: (Chuckling) That's what all the boys say, Mrs Brown. MRS BROWN: Well, suh, it's a fact I got into an argument with Mistuh Williams a couple weeks before Christmas . . . ELLERY: Who is Mr Williams, Mrs Brown? MRS BROWN: (Sniffing) Yankee storekeeper - keeps the groc'ry and meat market half mile into town. He's got a boy in the Navy, too. And he says his son's ship, the Buffalo, is the finest in the Navy. "Izzat so?" I says. "Mah Harry's ship, The Manila Bay, is!" Almost came to throwin' things. Theah was a crowd aroun' the counter laughin' their heads off, that ol' fool Williams was so mad. (Softening) But then we sort o' patched it up, an' Mistuh Williams give me a specially fine mess o' chitlin's to show there was no hard feelin's. NIKKI: Mrs Brown, did you ever hear your son, Harry, mention the name "Ellery Queen," or "Ellery Q?" MRS BROWN: Beg pardon, ma'am? I don' think so . . . ELLERY: (Smoothly) We needn't take up any more of Mrs Brown's time, Nikki. NIKKI: But, Ellery - ELLERY: Thank you, Mrs Brown. (Quietly) Dad. Sergeant - MRS BROWN: But, suh, I could tell y'all lots more 'bout mah Harry . . . ELLERY: I'm sure you could, Mrs Brown. SOUND: They bid Mrs Brown goodbye as they go to the door. MRS BROWN: Tell Harry his mom's prayin' he'll get better quick, suh. SOUND: They reassure her, and go down the path. INSPECTOR QUEEN: I don't blame you for cutting that one short, son. VELIE: Another washout. NIKKI: Hasn't heard of Ellery Queen! We'll never solve the mystery of "Ellery Q." ELLERY: Nevertheless, gentlemen and Miss Porter, Mrs Brown has given us our first clue in five hundred and forty-one visits. SOUND: They look blank. ELLERY: Nikki, you took notes? NIKKI: Yes, Ellery, of everything she said, but - VELIE: But what clue, Maestro? ELLERY: Didn't you spot it, Sergeant? It's not an important clue - it doesn't twll us much - but it encourages me to keep going. We're on the right track! Dad, who's next on our list? INSPECTOR QUEEN: Somebody in Lexington, Kentucky. Clue Number One, uh? Too much for me! ELLERY: Let's hurry, or we'll miss our train connection. Who knows? We may find Clue Number Two in the State of Kentucky! SCENE 4: Rev Jones vestry in Minneapolis. Two weeks later. The Queen group is sitting tiredly waiting. Organ music is playing in the background audible from the Church. INSPECTOR QUEEN: Nikki, how do we stand now? (He yawns) NIKKI: No luck in Kentucky, Inspector. Or in Ohio, or in Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin. Number of states covered: twenty. People visited: 'way over a thousand. (She yawns) So we find ourselves in Minneapolis, Minnesota, about to question the father of Lieutenant Thomas L Jones, US Army - (change of tone) - deceased. INSPECTOR QUEEN: Not even killed in action. Drowned on that ship the subs sank. VELIE: If y'ask me, it's hopeless. Twelve hundred and sixty-five visits - and one clue. In Richmond, Virginia. He says. SOUND: The door from the church opens, and Rev Jones appears. VELIE: Uh-uh. Here's the Reverend. Rev Jones is a fragile gentleman of sixty, looking as if he has recently suffered a great shock. REV JONES: (As he comes into the vestry) Mr. Queen? Forgive me for having kept you waiting. But my duties in the church . . . ELLERY: It's quite all right, Reverend Jones. You know why we're here? REV JONES: My sexton's told me. Won't you all sit down? (He sighs) It's about my son . . . and how he died in the service of his country. VELIE: (Muttering) Drowned without a rat's chance. INSPECTOR QUEEN: I'm a father myself, Reverend . . . NIKKI: We know how you feel. REV JONES: Thank you. We were very close, Tom and I. He was so full of life - I'm afraid sometimes my parish though Tommy was a bit too full of life! (Tremulously) God bless him. ELLERY: (Gently) He wrote to you frequently, Reverend? REV JONES: (Brightening) Oh yes, Mr Queen, every day! My wife is bed-ridden, you know. Tome knew how anxious his mother was about his daily welfare - how much his letters meant to us. SOUND: He opens a drawer of his desk. REV JONES: As a matter of fact, I . . . happened to keep the very last letter he ever wrote to us. Dated Christmas eve. If you wouldn't be bored . . . ELLERY: I assure you, Reverend, we're very much interested in Lieutenant Jones's last letter to his parents. REV JONES: That's kind of you, Mr Queen. I . . . SOUND: He stops, turning the pages of a letter slowly. Suddenly he chuckles. REV JONES: For example, listen to this - it's a part of the letter I've repeated to many friends and parishoners. You're sure I'm not boring you? ELLERY: (Gently) Quite sure, Reverend Jones. REV JONES: (Clearing his throat) "You especially will appreciate this, Dad. Just today one of the boys brought out an autographed photo of Dorothy Lamour, and Shavetail Billy Green said he'd swiped it from him and the other contestant - one of my special buddies in the company, Frank Winters - Frank said the h- he had, and they almost had a brawl about it." (Everybody chuckles) "So finally I said: 'You both claim it - why not put it up to Old Grouchy?' (our CO). They said okay and I had a hard time keeping a straight face, because our CO is full of surprises. Well, Old Grouch heard the case, and without batting an eye, he says: 'Gentlemen,' he says, 'you each claim possession of the autographed photo of this comely and estimable young woman,' he says, 'and since there are no other facts, I'll decide the case with absolute justice, to wit: I'll tear the photo in half - like this!' - and he rips poor Lamour right down the middle - 'and give each of you one half. Now scram,' the CO snarls, 'and start thinking about the War, or you'll find yourselves with a couple of desk jobs, while the rest of us are having fun!' You should have seen Frank's and Billy's faces . . ." (His voice breaks) . . . "Dad." (Pause) ELLERY: (Low) Dad. Velie. Nikki. Let's go. REV JONES: (Muffled) Oh, but really. I'm sorry. It - all came back. If you'll give me just a moment, please . . . ELLERY: Thank you, Reverend Jones. We shan't intrude any further. SOUND: They make their adieu, leaving him at his desk, a broken old man. NIKKI: (Sniffling) That was . . . such a sad letter. Ellery, you didn't even give me a chance to ask about the "Ellery Q." You never do. ELLERY: Never mind "Ellery Q" now, Nikki. Dad, we're in luck! INSPECTOR QUEEN: What luck? VELIE: Yeah. So we meet Reverend Jones in Minneapolis, so he read us Lieutenant Jones's last letter, so what have we got? The usual nothin'. ELLERY: On the contrary, Sergeant. We've got Clue Number Two. INSPECTOR QUEEN: Now wait a minute, son. You mean to say that somehow the enemy got hold of that boy's yarn to his father about Dorothy Lamour's photograph? ELLERY: (Grimly) I mean just that. VELIE: But duppose they did, Maestro? So what? ELLERY: Never mind now, Sergeant. Dad, we're really beginning to get somewhere! Nikki, who's next on our list? NIKKI: (Wearily) Somebody in Laramie, Wyoming. INSPECTOR QUEEN: (Wearily) Westward ho! SCENE 5: An airplane factory near Los Angeles. The Queens are ushered into the executive office of the factory. The din is deafening - they can scarcely hear one another. They all look tired and discouraged. MAN: Wait in this office, Mr Queen. I'll get her off the assembly line. SOUND: He goes and shuts the door. The noise of production comes through faintly. VELIE: So how do we stand, Miss Porter? NIKKI: We're scraping the bottom of the barrel, Sergeant. VELIE: East, South, Middle West, Far West - Oregon, Washington, now Los Angeles, California - and whatta we got? Sore pups. INSPECTOR QUEEN: And two clues I don't understand. NIKKI: Are you sure you weren't dreaming of clues in Richmond and Minneapolis, Ellery? ELLERY: (Impatiently) No, no, Nikki, they were clear as crystal. But there must be another clue somewhere! Perhaps more than one. INSPECTOR QUEEN: Who's this we're investigating in this airplane factory? NIKKI: A Mrs Richard K Smith of Los Angeles. She works here. SOUND: A door opens, letting in the din again, and Mrs Smith enters - a bitter-looking girl with a smudge on her cheek. NIKKI: Why, she's no older than I am. In overalls! MRS SMITH: (Abruptly as she comes in) Who's Mr Queen? ELLERY: I am, Mrs Smith. Special investigator for the . . . MRS SMITH: (Curtly) Yeah, I know - the foreman told me. I don't know what I can tell you. My husband's dead - died on a ship. So I got myself this job helpin' to make planes. ELLERY: That's courageous of you, Mrs Smith. MRS SMITH: Courageous? Hooey. I wish they'd let me shoot a machine gun. Make it snappy, please. Every minute I'm away from my bench means I'm holding up a plane. INSPECTOR QUEEN: Your husband was Private Richard K. Smith? MRS SMITH: Yeah. A draftee. We met while he was in camp near San Francisco. We . . . fell for each other. (Tensely) Why do I have to go over all this? I wanna get back to my work! ELLERY: I assure you it's necessary, Mrs Smith. NIKKI: I know how you feel, Mrs Smith. MRS SMITH: (Bitterly) Yeah? (Low) Dick didn't get leaves more'n once in a blue moon, and I couldn't afford to make the trip up to Frisco to visit him. It was . . . tough. Then - all of a sudden Dick shows up in L A - December, twenty-fourth. Unexpected one-day leave, he says. I bawled like a fool. Dick said there was a rumor in camp they were shovin' off, and that's why the boys got leave . . . (She begins to cry) NIKKI: (Low) Do you want my handkerchief, Mrs Smith? MRS SMITH: Th-thanks. (Sniffs) I had a feelin' in my bones I'd never see my Dick again. So I said: "Dick, let's get married. Now. Right away!" . . . He - he kissed me. But he said we ain't got no time - he's supposed to report back to camp in Frisco, and he just had time to make it . . . INSPECTOR QUEEN: But you did manage it, didn't you, Mrs Smith? VELIE: You must of, since you're a missus. MRS SMITH: (Raptly) Yeah. It was like a miracle. The last minute Dick gets a phone call from some officer in his camp, sayin' he was not to report back to camp but somewhere else . . . ELLERY: Just where was he to report, Mrs Smith? MRS SMITH: I don't know. All I know is the switch in plan gave my Dick seven hours' extra leave. So we got a lot of my friends together and told 'em all about it, and - and we got married, and then . . . Dick went away. I never even got a letter from him . . . ELLERY: (Gently) We're terribly sorry, Mrs Smith. MRS SMITH: (Fiercely) What am I cryin' for? I got a date with a bomber! And I hope it gets the dirty rat that got my husband! (She strides out) I gotta get back. . . SOUND: She disappears in the maw of the factory, a forlorn, gallant little figure. NIKKI: (Sniffling) I don't like this job, Ellery. I - want to go home. SOUND: Ellery soothes her. INSPECTOR QUEEN: We can't go home, Nikki. Not till we finish with this list of survivors and casualties from that torpedoed ship. VELIE: (Heavily) Who's next, Inspector? ELLERY: Never mind that list. We're through with it. NIKKI: Through with it! ELLERY: (Crisply) Yes. We've just found the third - and most important - clue. We don't need any more. INSPECTOR QUEEN: Don't need any more? But Ellery, that means. . . ELLERY: Yes, Dad, now I know how the enemy found out when and where to ambush that American ship! NIKKI: Bit how about the "Ellery Q," Ellery? That scrap of paper with your name on it that was found on the enemy commander? INSPECTOR QUEEN: You know what that means, too, son? ELLERY: Oh, I knew the answer to that, Dad, a long time ago. Let's go back to Washington - and report a successful solution. ANNOUNCER: And so Ellery Queen now knows the answer to the mystery of The Murdered Ship. Do you? You should be able to answer the three questions correctly: (1) What were the three clues Ellery spotted? (2) What did they mean to the enemy? (3) What did "Ellery Q" mean? And now the solution... SCENE 6: The Washington Official's Office, two days later. With the Official are Ellery and Inspector Queen, Nikki and Sergeant Velie. OFFICIAL: So you also solved the mystery of that "Ellery Q" on the enemy sub commander's scrap of paper, Mr Queen? ELLERY: (laughs) It wasn't my name. It isn't a name at all - the appearance was a coincidence. It's a code. SOUND: Nikki, the Inspector, and Velie exclaim in surprise. ELLERY: Let's take the "Q" part first. Which letter of the alphabet is "Q"? VELIE: (Muttering rapidly) A, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, . . . NIKKI: The seventeenth letter, Ellery. ELLERY: Remember that. Now one of our facts was that the ship was torpedoed at five PM. In one international system of figuring time, AM and PM are not used - the hours are numbered from one to twenty-four. By this system, the letter "Q" in the code-phrase "Ellery Q" would stand for the seventeenth hour. What is the seventeenth hour in terms of AM and PM? INSPECTOR QUEEN: Five PM - the time of the torpedoing! ELLERY: So we know "Q" is the time-instruction given to the commander of the enemy submarine. NIKKI: But what does the "Ellery" stand for? ELLERY: Obviously, Nikki, for a word which, when grouped with "Q" or "five PM" gives a clear message. Think of it as a group of letters - E, L, L, E, R, Y. Now note that the first and fourth letters are the same, and the second and third. Can you think of another word with similar construction? VELIE: (Heavily) Who, me, Maestro? ELLERY: Well, Sergeant, what happened at five PM? There was an attack on the ship. "Attack" - A, T, T, A, C, K! INSPECTOR QUEEN: "Ellery" - the code word for "Attack!" ELLERY: Yes, Dat. "Ellery Q" simply meant to the sub commander "Attack at five PM," which, combined with his other information gave him all he had to know. OFFICIAL: Exactly what the FBI figured out, Mr Queen, the day after you took this assignment. But how did the enemy know about the ship - that it was sailing, when, from where, and all about it? ELLERY: I found three clues, Sir, that told me the whole tragic story. Dad, what did Mrs Brown of Richmond, Virginia tell us? INSPECTOR QUEEN: Why, Mrs Brown said her son claimed his ship, The Manila Bay, was the finest in the Navy. ELLERY: Clue Number One! The name of the ship - The Manila Bay. Ships in the United States are named by a system. One type of American warship is named after famous American battles. Manila Bay was a famous American battle of the Spanish-American War. What type of ship is named after famous battles? VELIE: Aircraft carriers! ELLERY: An enemy agent overheard Mrs Brown's thoughtless remark that morning two weeks before Christmas - in a crowded store. When the enemy's intelligence headquarters in the United States fitted The Manila Bay into its other information, it was able to say: An aircraft carrier never sails alone. It is always accompanied by fighting craft, to protect it. Therefore a large naval force is involved. NIKKI: But Ellery, I still don't see. . . ELLERY: Ah, but what little bit of information did Reverend Jones of Minneapolis unconsciously reveal? VELIE: That joke about the argument in camp over Dorothy Lamour's photo and how their C O settled it. . . ELLERY: That yarn came from Lieutenant Jones's last letter - written, therefore, just before he was shipped out of camp. Rev Jones's son knew he might never come back, so on the eve of departure he tried to give his father ELLERY: an important piece of information by inventing a bit of apparently innocent camp gossip. Can we figure out what Tom was trying to say? Oh, yes. Consider that the letter was written to a minister of the Gospel on Christmas Eve. Consider that it was the story of two people claiming the same cherished object and a wise arbiter who said: "Cut it in half." INSPECTOR QUEEN: Tom was writing a parallel to the Bible story! Of the wise king who ordered an infant cut in half when two women claimed it! ELLERY: And who was that wise king? King Solomon. NIKKI: The Solomon Islands! VELIE: Tom was trying to tell his father he was bein' shipped off to the Solomons! ELLERY: Precisely. Reverend Jones thoughtlessly repeated it to his friends and parishioners. . . OFFICIAL: (Grimly) And eventually it reached a spy's ears, or some Axis sympathizer, and was sent along to enemy H Q to be added to the other bits of information about The Manila Bay and its accompanying naval force. And the third clue, Mr Queen? ELLERY: Nikki, what did Mrs Smith say? NIKKI: Well, that there was a rumor Dick Smith's outfit was going overseas. The day before Christmas when he was on unexpected leave, at the last minute he got an extra seven hours' leave. ELLERY: Or put it this way. Private Dick Smith, on unexpected leave in Los Angeles, was supposed to return to his camp near San Francisco. This trip normally takes ten hours. But because Smith was notified at the last minute to report to a different place, he found himself with seven hours' extra leave. In other words, his outfit had suddenly been moved from a place ten ELLERY: hours' travel from Los Angeles to a place only three hours' travel from Los Angeles! What important troop-embarkation point is three hours' travel from Los Angeles? INSPECTOR QUEEN: San Diego! NIKKI: And everybody at the Smiths' last-minute wedding was told about it by Mrs Smith. ELLERY: Yes, Sir, and when the enemy put all the bits and places together, along with other information that clearly tied them into a single operation, he knew: first, that a large naval force of fighting ships was involved. Second, this naval force was found for the Solomons - and not only that, but troops were involved, because Tom Jones was an Army Officer and Private Smith was a draftee. But this meant the fighting ships were convoying troop transports. And to warrant such a large naval escort, it must involve a great number of transports - so it was an important troop movement. Third, the convoy was sailing from San Diego, California. When? Lieutanent Jones wrote on Christmas Eve - Private Smith got his unexpected leave the same day, December twenty-fourth - so the time of the sailing was the next day, Christmas Day! The enemy relayed to its subs operating in the South Pacific these facts, and they merely lay in wait along the easily estimated route until the convoy appeared - a simple nautical calculation. There it is, Sir - the whole picture, from three little bits of loose talk! - 30 -

34. Used Paperback Books
queen, ellery Chinese Orange Mystery, The PB 17 1950 4 $6.00. queen, ellery Ten Days Wonder PB queen, ellery Lethal Black Book Dell 2261 1965 3 $4.00
http://www.ramblehouse.com/paperbacksp-r.htm
Return to Ramble House Page Condition Code 5 - Practically unread, right off the shelf quality 4 - Only slight wear, square spine, no flaws 3 - Good spine and cover, perhaps lightly tanned, perhaps a little scuffing 2 - Reading copy only 1 - I don't think there are any 1s Author Title Publisher ID Pub. Cond. Price Pangborn, Edgar West of the Sun Dell 9442 1966 4 $4.00 Palmer, Stuart The Puzzle of the Silver Persian bantam 25934 1986 3 $4.00 Pangborn, Edgar A Mirror for Observers Dell 10064 1980 2 $3.00 Panshin, Alexei Masque World Ace 02320 1969 4 $4.00 Park, Paul Soldiers of Paradise Avon 70581 1990 4 $4.00 Park, Paul Sugar Rain Avon 71179 1990 4 $4.00

35. Queen, Ellery., The Misadventures Of Sherlock Holmes. Edited By Ellery Queen.
First Edition, Inscribed by Vincent Starrett to Sherlockian Rachel Albright. 8vo; 363pp; + index, illustrated by Frederic Dorr Steele, black cloth stamped
http://www.polybiblio.com/pjbooks/6173.html
Priscilla Juvelis, Inc
Queen, Ellery. The Misadventures of Sherlock Holmes. Edited by Ellery Queen. Boston Little, Brown and Company 1944 First Edition, Inscribed by Vincent Starrett to Sherlockian Rachel Albright. 8vo; 363pp; + index, illustrated by Frederic Dorr Steele, black cloth stamped in red, dust jacket in black with yellow and orange with portrait of Holmes by Steele showing detective in profile with pipe in mouth and magnifying glass in hand examining a document, seated, dressed in robe and slippers. Book lightly rubbed with minor wear to tips; jacket a bit chipped at top and bottom of spine, and rubbed along edges, else a very good copy of a rare edition of THE MISADVENTURES. This item is listed on Bibliopoly by Priscilla Juvelis, Inc ; click here for further details.

36. HAYCRAFT-QUEEN CORNERSTONES
ellery queen (the writing team of Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee) revised the Haycraft list several times expanding it to include a broader range of
http://home.comcast.net/~dwtaylor1/haycraftqueen.html
HAYCRAFT-QUEEN CORNERSTONES,
A DEFINITIVE LIBRARY OF
DETECTIVE, CRIME AND MYSTERY FICTION
In 1941, Howard Haycraft compiled a list of detective stories for a book entitled Murder for Pleasure The Life and Times of the Detective Story. The list was prepared for “unpretentious detective story fans who may care to assemble for their own pleasure ‘cornerstone’ libraries of the best and most influential writing in the medium.” Ellery Queen (the writing team of Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee) revised the Haycraft list several times expanding it to include a broader range of crime and mystery fiction. The final list, often referred to as the “Haycraft-Queen Cornerstones” is as follows. The books listed were published 1748-1952.
Allingham, Margery Death of a Ghost. 1934
Ambler, Eric A Coffin for Demetrios. 1939
Anderson, Frederick Irving The Book of Murder. 1930
Armstrong, Charlotte Mischief. 1950

37. Stories, Listed By Author
The President Regrets *ellery queen, (ss) The Diners Club Magazine Sep 65 . ellery queen s Searches and Seizures, ed. ellery queen, Chivers Press,
http://contento.best.vwh.net/mags/s87.html
Mystery Short Fiction: 1990-1999
Stories, Listed by Author
Previous Table-of-Contents
QUEEN, ELLERY #1 (books) (continued)
  • The Lady Couldn't Explain [*Ellery Queen], (ss) This Week Dec 4 '49; also as "The Lonely Bride".
  • The Lonely Bride ["The Lady Couldn't Explain"; *Ellery Queen], (ss) This Week Dec 4 '49
    • EQMM Dec '51
    • Ellery Queen's Anthology Volume 1 , ed. Ellery Queen, London: May Fair, 1959
  • The Mad Tea-Party ["The Adventure of the Mad Tea-Party"; *Ellery Queen], (nv) Red Book Magazine Oct '34
    • 101 Years' Entertainment , ed. Ellery Queen, New York: Modern Library, 194?
  • The Motive ["Terror Town"; *Ellery Queen], (nv) Argosy Aug '56
    • EQMM May '90
  • The Odd Man, (ss) Playboy Jun '71
    • EQMM Oct '75
    • Masters of Suspense
  • The One-Penny Black [*Ellery Queen], (ss) Great Detective Apr '33; also as "The Adventure of the One-Penny Black".
  • The President Regrets [*Ellery Queen], (ss) The Diners Club Magazine Sep '65
    • EQMM Jul '67
    • Tales of Mystery and Suspense , ed. Theodore W. Hipple, Allyn and Bacon, 1977
  • The President's Half Disme ["The Adventure of the President's Half Disme"; *Ellery Queen], (nv) EQMM Feb '47
    • EQMM Dec '94
  • The Robber of Wrightsville [*Ellery Queen], (ss)

38. De Avonturen Van Ellery Queen - Ellery Queen | LibraryThing
Viskas apie De avonturen van ellery queen ellery queen. LibraryThing yra katalogavimo ir socialinio bendravimo svetain knyg myl tojams.
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39. Ellery Queen
A bibliography of ellery queen s books, with the latest releases, covers, descriptions and availability.
http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/q/ellery-queen/
Fantastic Fiction Authors Q Ellery Queen Preferences google_ad_client = "pub-4149752303753296";google_alternate_ad_url = "http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/frames/banner.htm";google_ad_width = 468;google_ad_height = 60;google_ad_format = "468x60_as";google_ad_type = "text_image";google_ad_channel ="5061332721";google_color_border = "6699CC";google_color_bg = "003366";google_color_link = "FFFFFF";google_color_url = "AECCEB";google_color_text = "AECCEB"; Home Awards New Books Coming Soon ... Years Browse Authors A H O V ... U
Ellery Queen
(Frederic Dannay and Manfred Bennington Lee) aka Barnaby Ross Search Authors Search Books About Ellery Queen Ellery Queen is the pseudonym of cousins Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee. Ellery Queen is also the name of their famous detective who has appeared in more than 30 novels and 70 short stories. He has been on the radio, in the movies, on television, and in comic books. The Mystery Writers of America gave Queen 7 Edgar awards and its coveted Grand Master award. Dannay and Lee also founded and edited Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine which, at 61 years and still going, is the longest running mystery anthology magazine in American history. They wrote Queen's Quorum, a scholarly examination of the detective short story, and edited more than 90 books of detective fiction. Worldwide, their books have sold more than 150 million copies. Series Drury Lane (writing as Barnaby Ross) The Tragedy of X The Tragedy of Y The Tragedy of Z Drury Lane's Last Case Novels The Roman Hat Mystery The French Powder Mystery The Dutch Shoe Mystery The Greek Coffin Mystery ... The American Gun Mystery aka

40. Palo Alto City Library Catalog
ellery queen s crime wave 24 stories from ellery queen s mystery magazine / edited by ellery queen s masters of mystery / edited by ellery queen.
http://webcat.cityofpaloalto.org/ipac20/ipac.jsp?index=.TW&npp=15&term=hoch

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