Best Adventures of 1946 (10)
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Maurice Richardson’s THE EXPLOITS OF ENGELBRECHT — far-out contests at the end of history.
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Maurice Richardson’s THE EXPLOITS OF ENGELBRECHT — far-out contests at the end of history.
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Mervyn Peake’s TITUS GROAN: a fantastical comedy of manners.
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Hergé’s PRISONERS OF THE SUN — A lost race of Incas plans to ritually kill Tintin.
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THE SECRET OF THE SWORDFISH — the first Blake & Mortimer comic.
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Edmund Crispin’s THE MOVING TOYSHOP — a crime novel, and a meta-commentary on crime fiction.
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Henry Kuttner’s THE DARK WORLD — a parallel world where mutants and wizards rule.
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William Lindsay Gresham’s NIGHTMARE ALLEY. Carnival noir.
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Michael Innes’s FROM LONDON FAR — a scholar gets swept up into a smuggling ring.
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Kenneth Fearing’s THE BIG CLOCK. We are all trapped in an invisible prison.
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Boris Vian’s I SHALL SPIT ON YOUR GRAVES. A sadistic satire of US pulp fiction.
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