Notes

1

Copyright, 1933, by Frank A. Munsey Co.

2

Copyright, 1936, by Hector Bolitho.

3

Copyright, 1924, by Street & Smith Publications, Inc.

4

Copyright, 1937, by Raoul Whitfield

5

From Mystery Magazine, copyright, 1935, by Tower Magazines, Inc.

6

Original version of “Queen’s Quorum” from Twentieth Century Detective Stories, edited by Ellery Queen. Copyright, 1948, by The World Publishing Company.

7

Conan Doyle considered The Pavilion on the Links “the very model of dramatic narrative.”

8

This statement is no longer true. Jack Moffitt submitted a short story called The Lady and the Tiger to the Third Annual Detective Short Story Contest sponsored by “Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine,” and won a Special Prize for the Best Tour de Force. Mr. Moffitt’s solution to the most famous of literary riddles is positively brilliant; it appeared in the September 1948 issue of EQMM, and later in THE QUEEN’S AWARDS, 1948 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1948).

9

Copyright, 1939, by Cornell Woolrich

Загрузка...