


Books in series

Dividend on Death
1939

The Private Practice of Michael Shayne
1940

The Uncomplaining Corpses
1940

Tickets For Death
1941

Bodies Are Where You Find Them
1941

The Corpse Came Calling
1942

In A Deadly Vein
1943

Heads You Lose
1943

Michael Shayne's Long Chance
1944

Murder and the Married Virgin
1944

Murder is My Business
1945

Marked for Murder
1945

Blood on Biscayne Bay
1946

Counterfeit Wife
1947

Blood on the Stars
1948

Michael Shayne's Triple Mystery
1948

A Taste for Violence
1949

Call for Michael Shayne
1949

This is It, Michael Shayne
1950

Framed in Blood
1952

What Really Happened
1952

When Dorinda Dances
1951

One Night With Nora
1953

She Woke to Darkness
1954

Death Has Three Lives
1955

Stranger in Town
1955

The Blonde Cried Murder
1957

Weep for a Blonde
1957

Shoot the Works
1957

Fit to Kill
1958

Target
Mike Shayne
1959

Die Like a Dog
1959

Murder Takes No Holiday
1960

Dolls Are Deadly
1960

Mike Shayne's Torrid Twelve
1961

Killers from the Keys
1962

Murder in Haste
1962

The Careless Corpse
1961

Never Kill A Client
1963

Too Friendly, Too Dead
1964

The Corpse That Never Was
1963

A Redhead for Mike Shayne
1964

Shoot to Kill
1965

Mike Shayne's 50th Case
1965

Nice Fillies Finish Last
1966

Murder Spins the Wheel
1966

Armed... Dangerous...
1966

Mermaid on the Rocks
1967

Guilty as Hell
1967

So Lush, So Deadly
1968

Violence is Golden
1968

Fourth Down to Death
1970

Kill All The Young Girls
1973

At the Point of a .38
1974

Million Dollar Handle
1976

Dead Man's Diary and A Taste for Cognac
1959
Authors

Kenneth Fearing (July 28, 1902 – June 26, 1961) was an American poet, novelist, and founding editor of Partisan Review. Literary critic Macha Rosenthal called him "the chief poet of the American Depression." Fearing was born in Oak Park, Illinois, the son of Harry Lester Fearing, a successful Chicago attorney, and Olive Flexner Fearing. His parents divorced when he was a year old, and he was raised mainly by his aunt, Eva Fearing Scholl. He went to school at Oak Park and River Forest High School, and was editor of the student paper, as was his predecessor Ernest Hemingway. After studying at the University of Illinois in Urbana and the University of Wisconsin, Fearing moved to New York City where he began a career as a poet and was active in leftist politics. In the 1920s and 1930s, he published regularly in The New Yorker and helped found Partisan Review, while also working as an editor, journalist, and speechwriter and turning out a good deal of pulp fiction. Some of Fearing's pulp fiction was soft-core pornography, often published under the pseudonym Kirk Wolff. In 1950, he was subpoenaed by the U.S. Attorney in Washington, D.C.; when asked if he was a member of the Communist Party, he is supposed to have replied, "Not yet."

AKA David Dresser Excerpt from Wikipedia: Brett Halliday (July 31, 1904 - February 4, 1977), primary pen name of Davis Dresser, was an American mystery writer, best known for the long-lived series of Mike Shayne novels he wrote, and later commissioned others to write. Dresser wrote non-series mysteries, westerns and romances under the names Asa Baker, Matthew Blood, Kathryn Culver, Don Davis, Hal Debrett, Anthony Scott, Peter Field, and Anderson Wayne.
Frank Kane, Brooklyn-born and a lifetime New Yorker, worked for many years in journalism and corporate public relations before shifting to fiction writing. At the time he was selling crime stories to the pulps he was also sustaining a career writing scripts for such radio shows as Gangbusters and The Shadow. In addition to the Johnny Liddells, Kane wrote several suspense novels, some softcore erotica, and (under the pen name of Frank Boyd) "Johnny Staccato", a Gold Medal original paperback based on the short-lived noir television series, starring John Cassavetes, about a Greenwich Village bebop pianist turned private detective.