X. Jones of Scotland Yard
8vo, pp. 448. Original purple boards, lettered in black to front panel and spine. Top edge orange, leading edge uncut. Illustrated dust jacket. A little fading and spotting to spine, offsetting to endpapers, small bookseller's label to rear pastedown. A very good copy in a very good price-clipped dust jacket with a little spotting to spine. First edition. As in its predecessor The Marceau Case (1936), Keeler writes X. Jones of Scotland Yard in the style of an official police dossier. The Wonderful Scheme of Mr. Christopher Thorne (1937) completed the trilogy. A very well preserved copy. HUBIN, p. 234
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Doctor Who and the Android Invasion
8vo, pp. 126. Original grey boards, lettered in gilt to spine. Illustrated dust jacket, author's photographic portrait to rear flap. Usual browning to cheap paper stock, corners a little bumped, but a very good copy in a very good dust jacket with just a little light edgewear, a couple of red ink marks to rear flap, and a small indentation to front panel near spine. Dust jacket illustration by Roy Knipe. First edition of this novelisation tie-in from the Tom Baker era. Terrance Dicks here adapts a story written by Terry Nation for the thirteenth series of the TV series; Dicks spent five years as the show's script editor. Scarce, and getting scarcer.Miss Ferriby’s Clients
8vo, pp. 251, 4pp. advertisements bound in at rear. Illustrated boards, lettered in black to front panel and spine. Boards a little darkened and with some rubbing to spine ends, but a very well preserved copy. First edition. After early employment as a governess and actress, Florence Warden [1957-1929] settled down to an extremely prolific career as a popular novelist, turning her hand to mystery, murder, romance and ghost stories with equal facility. (Miss Ferriby's Clients, set in an apparently haunted house and featuring seances, robbery and murder, is typical of Warden's output.) Her work was in huge demand through subscription libraries, and at her peak she was publishing as many as eight novels a year. By the time of her death in 1929 she had published more than one hundred and fifty novels. A very well preserved copy, and now scarce. HUBIN, p. 425Uncharted Seas
8vo, pp. 408, 8pp. catalogue of Wheatley titles and 24pp. publisher's catalogue bound in at rear. Original black boards, lettered in gilt to spine, publisher's name in gilt to front board. Map endpapers. Spine ends a little bumped, otherwise a near fine copy in a very good dust jacket, some light general edgewear, and an unobtrusive 1cm closed tear to top edge of rear panel. Dust jacket and endpapers design by Diana Younger. First edition, INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHOR: 'For W. Royden, with the best of good wishes from his friend Dennis Wheatley'. Walter Royden (born Walter Smith) worked in publishing, and was the father of the actor Auriol Smith. An early Wheatley title, a lost world novel, and the basis for Hammer's The Lost Continent (1968), directed by Michael Carreras and starring Eric Porter and Hildergard Knef. Inscribed, in the dust jacket, and rare.Madame Baltimore
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8vo, pp. 316. Original illustrated orange boards, lettered in white to front panel and spine. Contemporary ownership signature to front pastedown, lettering to spine a little rubbed, but a tightly bound and very well preserved copy. First edition. Sheldon wrote the stage play, McConaughy collaborated with the novelisation, and the whole was filmed in 1915 by Emile Chautard. (The film is now lost.) HUBIN, p. 266Pinktoes
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AVALLONE, Michael 8vo, pp. 204. Original red boards, lettered in silver to spine. Illustrated dust jacket. A fine copy in a very near fine dust jacket with just a little darkening to (white) rear panel. First UK edition. First published as an Ace paperback original in the US in 1957. An Ed Noon title. The impossibly prolific Michael Avallone [1924-1999] wrote countless short stories, novels and movie and TV tie-ins, under an army of pseudonyms. The Ed Noon series ran to more than thirty titles; this was number six. There is never any danger of mistaking Avallone for Chekhov: the title character of The Case of the Bouncing Betty is a four hundred pound mattress tester who, according to the blurb, 'jumps on one mattress too many, and comes to a sudden and distressing end.' A fine copy. HUBIN, p. 18- $59
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X. Jones of Scotland Yard: https://rarebookinsider.com/rare-books/x-jones-of-scotland-yard/