Margins
Mike Shayne book cover 1
Mike Shayne book cover 2
Mike Shayne book cover 3
Mike Shayne
Series · 56
books · 1939-1976

Books in series

Dividend on Death book cover
#1

Dividend on Death

1939

It seemed more a case for a psychoanalyst than a detective when hysterical Phyllis Brighton—rich, beautiful, and barely out of her teens—tried to hire Mike Shayne to watch her, because she was afraid she was going to murder her mother. But when Mike got a load of the set-up at the Brighton mansion, two things changed his mind: a slimy private secretary named Montrose, and a phony doctor whose theories began where Freud's left off. Both of them were just a little too anxious to convince the stubborn redhead that Phyllis was "a very sick girl." And Mike Shayne was a man who liked to make up his own mind.
The Private Practice of Michael Shayne book cover
#2

The Private Practice of Michael Shayne

1940

For the sake of his friends, Mike Shayne tangles with blackmailers—and a murderer The day he met Phyllis Brighton, Mike Shayne saved her from jumping out a window—and he has been rescuing her ever since. First he helped her beat a murder wrap; now he’s trying to pry her away from the sleaziest lawyer in Dade County: Harry Grange. A mouthpiece for every crook in Miami, Grange is running a blackmail racket when Shayne sees him with Phyllis on his arm at a local gambling hall. Shayne warns his friend to ditch her crooked beau, but she is too proud to take his advice. Unfortunately for her, the relationship will end with murder. Shayne gets the call just after he gets back to his office. Harry Grange has been found dead on the sands of Miami Beach. Even worse, Shayne’s gun is missing and his friend Larry Kincaid may have used it to gun down the blackmailing lawyer. To save his friends, Mike Shayne will have to outsmart the cleverest killer in town.
The Uncomplaining Corpses book cover
#3

The Uncomplaining Corpses

1940

The honeymoon is over—and it’s time for Mike Shayne to prepare for Miami’s killing season For years, Mike Shayne has tangled with the toughest crooks the country has to offer, outsmarting some and outpunching the rest. He was good at his job, but he had no one to come home to—until he met Phyllis. After rescuing his damsel in distress more than once, the hard-boiled PI found himself falling in love, and before he knew it, they were married and on their honeymoon in Cuba. Unfortunately for the lovebirds, their migration home to Miami marks the height of tourist season, when every gangster in America travels south to play. He may be a married man, but Mike Shayne won’t be spending this balmy winter cozied up at home. When a real-estate developer tries to hire Shayne to break into his home as part of an insurance-fraud scam, the scheme quickly turns to murder. With more deaths on the horizon, Shayne will have to be careful if he doesn’t want to celebrate his first wedding anniversary behind bars.
Tickets For Death book cover
#4

Tickets For Death

1941

From the back jacket... Mayme never gave anything away. This time she was selling information-the low down on a million dollar racket. She was willing to tell Mike everything for a mere thousand in cash...but with a girl like Mayme, the action was more interesting than the talk...
Bodies Are Where You Find Them book cover
#5

Bodies Are Where You Find Them

1941

Shayne isn't one to say no to a gorgeous, rich young doll who gets absolutely everything she wants - and what she wants is him. But he changes his tune when he finds her cold and lifeless body on his bed. The dead girl's stepfather is a slippery politician who'd be happy to watch Shayne fry - for a crime he didn't commit. Mike Shayne knows it's a frame-up. But what exactly is the game...and who's calling the plays? He's a tough private eye with a nose for trouble, an eye for the ladies, and two fists for anyone who stands in his way. He works out of Miami, but he's no fashion plate with a fast car. Shayne's a hard-drinking, tough-minded guy on the wrong end of thirty. He's in a business where nobody gets rich, and every new case seems just a little dirtier than the last.
The Corpse Came Calling book cover
#6

The Corpse Came Calling

1942

Mike Shayne is accused of homicide after a dying man stumbles into his office When an old friend calls begging to see him immediately, Mike Shayne is surprised to say the least. He hasn’t set eyes on Jim Lacy in ten years, and time has not been kind. Jim’s face is deeply wrinkled, and his eyes are glazed. His skin is gray—and there is blood seeping through his shirt. Jim mutters a few last words as he collapses on Shayne’s office floor. His stomach is filled with lead and he is dead before he hits the ground. Shayne reaches into Lacy’s pocket and pulls out his wallet. Emptying it, he finds $200—enough for a retainer fee. Mike Shayne has never let a client’s murder go unpunished, and he will not rest until he catches the men who shot Jim Lacy and sent him to die. But first he will have to convince the police that he was not the man who pulled the trigger.
In A Deadly Vein book cover
#7

In A Deadly Vein

1943

FIRST PAPERBACK EDITION THUS, Dell #905, published and 1st Edition under this title. Author’s seventh Mike Shayne mystery. Original 25 cover price. Paperback, 192 pages, 17 cm. Previously released by Dell under the title 'Murder Wears A Mummer's Mask' Dell #78 in 1943 and Dell #388 in March 1950. Original hardcover first edition published by Dodd, Mead in 1943.
Heads You Lose book cover
#8

Heads You Lose

1943

After hearing a murder over the phone, Mike Shayne searches for the killer Woken by the telephone, Mike Shayne is disoriented. Though he has been alone since his wife was murdered, he has not gotten used to sleeping by himself. The voice on the other end of the telephone snaps him back into reality. It’s his friend Clem Wilson, calling from a filling station outside of Miami, and there is terror in his voice. He has time for just a few words before Shayne hears the crack of broken glass and the thud of a falling body. By the time he reaches the filling station, the police are already there and Wilson has two bullets in his chest—and either of them would have been enough to kill him. Clem Wilson was mixed up in something he couldn’t handle, and if Mike Shayne can’t set aside his grief and unravel the mystery, his friend will not be the last to die.
Michael Shayne's Long Chance book cover
#9

Michael Shayne's Long Chance

1944

From the back She was a full blown brunette in a bandanna halter that just covered the essentials. The non-essentials were very impressive too. This was just the kind of case Shayne could enjoy. Keeping an eye on a dish like this and getting paid for it to boot.
Murder and the Married Virgin book cover
#10

Murder and the Married Virgin

1944

Mike Shayne investigates an impossible murder in the Big Easy It’s not often that Mike Shayne runs with an honorable crowd, but there is a lieutenant in his office mourning the fiancée who killed herself the day before. Honest and heartbroken, he begs this hardened private investigator for help answering one simple, impossible question: Why? It’s a question Shayne has been asking ever since his wife was murdered in Miami and he moved to New Orleans to escape her memory. For the sake of a soldier, he will put his own mourning aside and try to explain a suicide that looks an awful lot like murder. Katrin Moe was working as a maid in the home of a wealthy New Orleans family when she was found locked in her room, the gas pumping full blast. Coincidentally, a priceless emerald necklace went missing from the house a few days before and the insurance company hired Shayne to find it. On the hunt for a killer, Shayne will find that the necklace and the crook are more closely related than meets the eye.
Murder is My Business book cover
#11

Murder is My Business

1945

MURDER AT THE RIO GRANDE Ten years ago, private eye Mike Shayne did a job for one of the richest men in El Paso, digging up dirt on a boy courting the tycoon’s daughter. Now the daughter’s back, all grown up and dangerous. And so’s Shayne—but this time it’s to investigate murder... \* First publication in 20 years \* One of the most popular detectives of all time, Mike Shayne starred in more than 70 novels, a dozen movies, a TV series, radio dramas, comic books, and the long-running Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine Filmmaker SHANE BLACK, creator of Lethal Weapon and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, on the Work of BRETT HALLIDAY "In this age of private eyes with cats, funny neighbors, and relationship woes—here’s to 40’s thriller writer Brett Halliday, whose baffling, bullet-paced capers have come to light again. "Halliday’s books were marvels of misdirection. Red herrings, skewed motives, mistaken identities—he did everything but come to your house and bang cymbals. "Halliday’s plots are byzantine gems. This is back when mystery writers were so much smarter than you and me. Want an engrossing read? Pick this one up. "Never heard of this book? No matter. It’s been waiting patiently, poised to dazzle you with raw, ingenious storytelling. Halliday is the king of the baffler novel. Pure pleasure. "How long can Halliday’s best-selling books remain dormant, undiscovered...? The answer: not a minute longer, thanks to Hard Case Crime."
Marked for Murder book cover
#12

Marked for Murder

1945

Mike Shayne Mystery
Blood on Biscayne Bay book cover
#13

Blood on Biscayne Bay

1946

Cover by Robert McGinnis.
Counterfeit Wife book cover
#14

Counterfeit Wife

1947

A chance encounter at the airport leads Mike Shayne into a ring of counterfeiters Mike Shayne has been trying to leave Miami for weeks, but something keeps stopping him from returning to New Orleans. He’s about to board the midnight flight to Louisiana when his secretary calls and tells him not to bother. His stalling has cost them another client, and she’s fed up. She quits, and Shayne realizes that she was the only thing tying him to New Orleans. A man approaches Shayne to beg for his ticket, paying for it with two hundred dollar bills that seem too good to be true. Mike Shayne is staying in Miami—but how long will he stay alive? The man’s wife appears at the airport, a jaw-dropping blonde too lovely to be married to such a weasel. Shayne follows her, embarking on a night out on the town that quickly turns deadly. The money may be fake, but the bullets are all too real.
Blood on the Stars book cover
#15

Blood on the Stars

1948

A girl is left to die on Mike Shayne's bed...an "accident is revealed...thirty-six thousand dollars are found stuffed in a dresser drawer...and Shayne is forced to break his rule never to carry a gun on a job...all in an action-packed, danger-ridden escapade on the shores of Florida's Biscayne Bay.
Michael Shayne's Triple Mystery book cover
#16

Michael Shayne's Triple Mystery

1948

Collection of short stories.
A Taste for Violence book cover
#17

A Taste for Violence

1949

In a mining town, Mike Shayne finds that buried secrets can be deadly The miners are striking in Centerville, Kentucky, and the town is about to explode. Three men have been killed in the past week, and Charles Roche fears he will be next. Heir to the Roche mining fortune, he sees death in every shadow, and the only man who can save his life is in Miami. Roche writes to world-famous detective Mike Shayne, offering a $5,000 retainer to come to Centerville and save his life. Shayne cashes the check and hops on a plane, but by the time he gets to Kentucky, his client is already dead. The mines stretch for miles underneath Centerville, and the whole town is rotten to the core. For the sake of his murdered client, Shayne takes on the entire corrupt city. If he’s lucky, he’ll save Centerville’s soul. If he’s not, he’ll end up buried much deeper than six feet underground.
Call for Michael Shayne book cover
#18

Call for Michael Shayne

1949

Mike Shayne investigates a murder committed by an amnesiac Arthur Devlin wakes up so hungover that for a moment, he thinks the ship is sinking. As he gets his bearings, he realizes the only storm is inside his own head—and he isn't on a ship at all. The last thing he remembers is being handed another drink at his going-away party. That was twelve days ago. Devlin has awoken in a sleazy hotel room, dressed in a stranger's ratty clothes, with a bump on his forehead and a dead man at his feet. The phone A woman who calls him Joey asks if he went through with the murder. Devlin has no choice but to say yes. To find out if he's really a killer, Devlin hires Mike Shayne. Shayne has twenty-four hours to fill in the gaps of his client's memory—and he will discover things that Devlin would rather stay forgotten.
This is It, Michael Shayne book cover
#19

This is It, Michael Shayne

1950

A scissors-blade slaying rocks Miami, as a torn $500 bill in the hands of a murdered girl prods Michael Shayne into a danger-filled chase.
Framed in Blood book cover
#20

Framed in Blood

1952

When a blackmail scheme goes wrong, Mike Shayne is left to pick up the pieces Bert Jackson could have been a great reporter, if he had the patience for it. Married to a woman with expensive taste, Jackson has spent himself into the kind of debt that he’ll never pay off at $62.50 a week. He needs a big score, and he needs it tonight. Working the city hall beat, Jackson has stumbled upon the greatest corruption scandal in Miami history. If he publishes it, he could win a Pulitzer. But it’s money that he wants, and he’ll risk death to get it. Using the information in his story, Jackson plans to blackmail a powerful local official for $10,000, and he asks Mike Shayne for help. Shayne has seen too many blackmail artists wind up dead to get involved with something like this, and he warns Jackson to stay away. When the reporter turns up dead, it’s up to Shayne to uncover his final scoop.
What Really Happened book cover
#21

What Really Happened

1952

Wanda was no lady But she was everything else a woman could be. Blackmail, blue movies, seduction and swindling—all were right up Wanda's alley. It was when she saw her path heading for a dead end that she called in Mike Shayne. Soon Mike had a murdered temptress on his hands, a very live lovely in his arms, a crew of far-out suspects on his back—and his neck in a nasty noose of double-cross.
When Dorinda Dances book cover
#22

When Dorinda Dances

1951

Suddenly there was an electrifying fanfare from the orchestra, and bright blue moonlight flared out from the semi-circle of spots on the floor. Dorinda leaped from nowhere. The clean, taut lines of her slim, nude body were breathtakingly beautiful. Abandon and wild desire were in every movement of her lovely, supple form. Just a sweet little college girl from a nice family taking some extra curricular courses in exotic dancing at a joint called La Roma. No one could dance like Dorinda. Shayne had to admit she was dynamite, but her explosive act was about to be broken up by murder.
One Night With Nora book cover
#23

One Night With Nora

1953

A naked intruder leads Mike Shayne to one of the strangest cases of his career Mike Shayne is never surprised to wake up with a woman in his bedroom—unless she’s a stranger. The private investigator is dozing when he hears someone creep through the door, undress, and slip into bed. When he turns on the light, the lady is just as shocked as he is. Her name is Nora, and she was told she’d find her husband here. Fortunately, she’s much better off having found Shayne. Nora’s spouse came to Miami to establish residency, which is the first step toward getting a divorce. By slipping into Shayne’s bedroom, she would’ve spoiled his scheme, but someone gave her the wrong information. Her husband is staying on the floor above. When Nora finally reaches the right room, she finds that the man she’s been looking for has been murdered, and her only alibi is a detective who’s starting to wish the naked dame had never found her way into his room.
She Woke to Darkness book cover
#24

She Woke to Darkness

1954

Who is this girl? Loves good times and parties. After third martini has habit of giving her key to the nearest man, walking out with another. Natural enemy of all wives. Who is this man? Takes fun where he finds it, and finds plenty. His little black book covers territory from Greenwich Village to Yorkville. His goal is usually fun. This time it was murder. Mike Shayne in a tense, violent, deadly game tries to out-guess a sinister combo and plays hide-and-seek with murder.
Death Has Three Lives book cover
#25

Death Has Three Lives

1955

Mike Shayne needed time to crack his latest case—just a little more time and a lot more luck. But the cops were getting impatient. They thought Shayne already knew more than he let on—much more—and they wanted in. They knew Shayne knew that Lucy Hamilton was next on the murderer's agenda. Shayne said he would handle it his own way. If Lucy's life and Mike's neck were to be saved, Mike would have to work fast. It would take all his skill to break one of the most cleverly coded messages he had ever run up against. And time was running out...
Stranger in Town book cover
#26

Stranger in Town

1955

In a strange town, Mike Shayne meets a deadly damsel in distress Mike Shayne is 3 hours from Miami when the sun dips below the horizon and he decides to make a pit stop. For Shayne, that means cognac, and the only bar in town is a lonely little dive whose inhabitants don’t look friendly. Shayne doesn’t care. The barkeep pulls a dusty bottle down from the top shelf, and Shayne is settling into his drink when a blonde walks through the door. As the detective admires her, she raises her hand . . . and with a gesture of her dainty little finger, marks him for death. Two men wrestle Shayne outside, beat him senseless, and try to run him over with their car. To escape this hayseed town alive, Shayne will have to discover the identity of the dame from the bar—and why she chose for him to die.
The Blonde Cried Murder book cover
#27

The Blonde Cried Murder

1957

Mike Shayne has 2 hours to solve a murder—or else watch his lover die It’s 2 hours before midnight when the woman in room 360 calls the front desk to report a murder. The house detective sprints upstairs, but finds room 360 totally empty: no killer, no victim, and no woman begging for help. Across town, Mike Shayne is driving back to his office after a romantic evening with Lucy Hamilton. Despite the quiet and the moonlight, in his bones he knows that this is not a night for romance. There’s death in the air. Later, a woman appears at Shayne’s office, claiming her brother was murdered at the Hibiscus Hotel. A man follows in her wake, insisting that he’s her brother, and the woman is insane. Then a killer corners Lucy in her apartment, giving Shayne until midnight to solve the mystery and save his lover’s life.
Weep for a Blonde book cover
#28

Weep for a Blonde

1957

Miami Detective in Nite-Club Brawl. In the exclusive Martinique, last night, a private tête-à-tête between private detective Michael Shayne and luscious Lydia Kane was interrupted when the lady's husband made a surprise appearance. A violent exchange of words between the two men was followed by an equally violent exchange of blows.... From the beginning, Lydia Kane was nothing but trouble for Mike Shayne. And the ending (Lydia's, that is) was worse. It was murderous.
Shoot the Works book cover
#29

Shoot the Works

1957

Although few men realized it, Lola wasn't actually beautiful. What she had was far more potent than mere beauty - an aura of pure unadulterated sex, so distinct it took your breath away. Mike could easily understand how Jim Wallace, a faithful husband for twenty-five years and a man of irreproachable character, could suddenly go off the deep end over a babe like Lola. Just looking at Lola's dead body, Mike could understand...
Fit to Kill book cover
#31

Fit to Kill

1958

Private eye Mike Shayne comes to the aid of his kidnapped reporter friend, Tim Rourke, who had been investigating an underground revolution in Central America
Target book cover
#33

Target

Mike Shayne

1959

Out of jail and hungry for revenge, a career criminal comes after Mike Shayne They call him the Actor. An armed robber with a sense of style, Bram Clayton planned every heist with care, slipping so convincingly into the actions and motives of his characters that even experts couldn’t tell him apart from the real thing. He played electricians, salesmen, even a bank examiner, but for the last 13 years he’s been stuck in a single jailbird. When Clayton finally earns freedom, he has no trouble convincing the warden he’s going to stay straight, but the Actor is about to pull the greatest heist of his career. There’s a beautiful woman waiting for Clayton when he gets out. An old friend with an ulterior motive, she comes equipped with a bottle of whiskey, a carton of cigarettes, clean clothes, a gun, and a plan for a $200,000 heist so simple that it’s almost a sure thing—so long as it isn’t upset by Clayton’s hunger for revenge against the man who put him legendary detective Mike Shayne. Mike Shayne is the 33rd book in the Mike Shayne Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
Die Like a Dog book cover
#34

Die Like a Dog

1959

Mike Shayne goes grave robbing in a pet cemetery to solve the case of a millionaire’s murder It’s 11:00 am, and Mike Shayne has just poured himself a cognac, when Henrietta Rogell strolls into his office. Normally, Shayne would extend no special favors to a wealthy client, but his checking account is nearly empty, and he’s willing to straighten his tie for the sake of a millionaire—especially when she’s come about something as lucrative as murder. Miss Rogell’s brother, John, died 2 days before. The coroner ruled it a heart attack, but Henrietta is convinced he was poisoned, and she will pay handsomely for Shayne to prove it. His first lead is a murdered dog. Daffy, the beloved Pekinese of John Rogell’s young wife, Anita, dropped dead after eating a bowl of soup laced with strychnine. Every member of the family had a reason to want Rogell out of the picture. To find the killer, Shayne will have to disturb the departed—and dig up the canine victim. Die Like a Dog is the 35th book in the Mike Shayne Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
Murder Takes No Holiday book cover
#35

Murder Takes No Holiday

1960

The mild little guy was nervous when he walked into the U.S. Customs Office at Miami. He cheered up when he heard that informers didn't have to testify in court. He said they'd be hearing from him soon. But they never did. A few days later his body was found in Saint Albans, British West Indies, stabbed to death. Was there big money involved? Michael Shayne thought so when he took over the case for the customs' men during his "holiday" in Saint Albans. The trail introduced him to as fascinating a set of characters as he had ever met—Vivienne Larousse, Parisian dancer, cynical sultry, ready to do anything for an American visa; Paul Slater, trying desperately to conceal his affair with Vivienne from his hard-working wife, Martha; Luis Alvarez, alias the Camel, who was suspected of everything, but who had never been convicted of anything; and Cecil Powys, who claimed he was in Saint Albans to get material for a PhD thesis in anthropology, but who seemed to know a lot more about the usefulness of a straight left to the jaw. Michael Shayne has to be fast on his feet and faster in his thinking to unravel this ingenious tangle of intrigue and passion in a story that moves with jet-speed from one dramatic action to the next and ends with a typical Shayne twist as logical as it is unexpected.
Dolls Are Deadly book cover
#36

Dolls Are Deadly

1960

192 page paperback Mike Shayne book.
Mike Shayne's Torrid Twelve book cover
#38

Mike Shayne's Torrid Twelve

1961

Paperback anthology of stories that originally appeared in MSMM, including one Mike Shayne tale, "Death Dives Deep", written by Robert Arthur, as well as stories by Hal Ellson, Talmage Powell, Frank Kane, Robert Bloch, Richard Deming, Henry Slesar, and Jonathan Craig, among others.
Killers from the Keys book cover
#39

Killers from the Keys

1962

Mike Shayne takes a dip in the deadly Florida Keys for a dancer named Sloe Burn He smells her perfume before he walks through the door. It’s called Black Sin, and the woman wearing it certainly lives up to the name. Esther Piney, better known as Sloe Burn, is a hard-boiled stripper born and raised in the swamps of the Florida Keys. Where she’s from, murder is currency, and bodies disappear never to be found. Her favorite client has vanished, taking a fat bankroll with him, and she knows the only way she’ll get him back is to beg a favor from the legendary Mike Shayne. Unfortunately for Sloe Burn, Shayne doesn’t make a habit of tracking down missing strip-club regulars. But when a woman comes asking him to find her husband—who just happens to fit the description of Sloe Burn’s sugar daddy—Shayne decides it’s time to go fishing in the darkest corner of the Keys. Killers from the Keys is the 39th book in the Mike Shayne Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
Murder in Haste book cover
#40

Murder in Haste

1962

Triple Jeopardy The first time Mike Shayne saw Rose Heminway, the beautiful and wealthy young widow was in her living room, terror in her eyes and desperate pleading in her voice. The second time, she was emerging fresh and rosy from her shower, a smile on her lips. The third time, she was in her bedroom, a gun in her hand. This gorgeous dish spelled trouble all the way - but when it came in such a tasty package, trouble was Mike Shayne's meat... Mike Shayne, the coolest private eye of them all, swings into red hot action in one of his greatest cases of mystery and mayhem.
The Careless Corpse book cover
#41

The Careless Corpse

1961

From back of the book: "Three unsigned valentines, stamped with blackmail and sealed in blood invite Mike Shayne to accept a proposal of murder - his latest and most explosive case."
Never Kill A Client book cover
#44

Never Kill A Client

1963

Mike Shayne finds himself caught up in a strange conspiracy when he's invited to Los Angeles by a terrified woman It's the end of summer and Miami is as quiet as the grave. To Mike Shayne, the city's most notorious private detective, it seems as though he'll never have another case like the ones that made his matters of life and death that can only be solved by quick thinking, fast fists, and an itchy trigger finger. And then comes the letter from Los Angeles. It holds a plane ticket, half a $1,000 bill, and a desperate appeal. Come to L.A., begs the woman who penned the letter, or it will be my death sentence. Before he even lands in L.A., Shayne is enmeshed in a plot straight out of Hollywood. And when his mysterious client proves impossible to find, the detective worries he's been lured into a deadly trap. Never Kill a Client is the 43rd book in the Mike Shayne Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
Too Friendly, Too Dead book cover
#45

Too Friendly, Too Dead

1964

An ordinary chump has been murdered—and Mike Shayne has 36 hours to find the killer When Linda Fitzgilpin is woken by the sound of the ringing telephone, she finds her husband is missing. For years now, Jerome has always slept in his bed across the room, but last night he didn’t come home. When the phone rings, Linda knows why. A body matching his description has been found at the scene of an accident—Jerome is dead. Uncertain of what to do, Linda asks her downstairs neighbor Lucy Hamilton for help. And Lucy calls her boss, the toughest private detective in Miami: Mike Shayne. Responding quickly, Shayne takes the newly minted widow to identify the body, and is on hand when the routine procedure turns into an ordeal. Although Linda’s husband’s body was found dead beside a wrecked car, it wasn’t the crash that killed him. It was poison—and Shayne has only 36 hours to find the killer before the trail turns as cold as the body on the slab. Too Friendly, Too Dead is the 45th book in the Mike Shayne Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
The Corpse That Never Was book cover
#46

The Corpse That Never Was

1963

Mike Shayne finds strange secrets hidden beneath the cover of a grisly double suicide It’s 10:30 pm, and Mike Shayne is sipping cognac, ruminating on the perfection of Lucy Hamilton’s fried chicken, when a shotgun fires upstairs. Following the acrid stench of gunpowder to a locked door halfway down the hall, Shayne has no choice but to batter it down, tumbling face first into the scene of a particularly ugly double suicide. The woman lies on the floor in the middle of the sitting room, her face twisted by the deadly kiss of cyanide. A few feet beyond her body is what remains of a man, his head obliterated by the shotgun’s blast. The woman’s father is one of Miami’s power brokers, and he refuses to believe that his daughter would end her life over a silly affair. Isn’t it possible, he asks, that she was murdered? Convinced or not, Shayne is the only man ruthless enough to find out. The Corpse That Never Was is the 46th book in the Mike Shayne Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
A Redhead for Mike Shayne book cover
#48

A Redhead for Mike Shayne

1964

A warehouse robbery pulls Mike Shayne into a daring international conspiracy It’s been years since Mike Shayne last subjected himself to a stakeout. Miami’s most infamous private detective simply doesn’t have time to waste sitting in a car, drinking cold coffee and waiting for excitement that will never come. But the Acme Bonding Company is one of his oldest clients, and when his stand-in falls through, he’s obliged to keep watch himself. A string of warehouse robberies, timed to coincide with hurricanes, has put Miami’s business community on the alert. So when a tropical storm closes in, Acme asks Shayne to keep a lookout for burglars. He waits with his pistol in hand. The burglars enter the warehouse quietly, like professionals, but Shayne still sees them coming—and his trigger finger is itchy. A shootout leaves 1 burglar dead and the others on the lam. But when he searches the city for the rest of the gang, Shayne finds that Miami is about to get hit by something far deadlier than a tropical storm. A Redhead for Mike Shayne is the 48th book in the Mike Shayne Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
Shoot to Kill book cover
#49

Shoot to Kill

1965

Mike Shayne's advice to looker Dorothy Larson was to cut the monkey business before her husband's hot temper drove him to cold-blooded murder. Ralph Larson already has blood on his hands, and his victim is no stranger to police files - because this corpse has already been murdered. Shayne finds himself working ona case where nothing is what it seems.
Mike Shayne's 50th Case book cover
#50

Mike Shayne's 50th Case

1965

New look for a private eye. How do you reform a detective who's been booked too many times for murder, swayed too many times by well-stacked temptation? You don't! But you can give him a case like nobody has ever had before—-and get set for a night like you've never had before.
Nice Fillies Finish Last book cover
#52

Nice Fillies Finish Last

1966

Murder Spins the Wheel book cover
#53

Murder Spins the Wheel

1966

Long Shot On A Bad Girl This was one case where Mike shayne was more than willing to gamble—-especially when he discovered that the luscious, lucky charmer who came with it was definitely not a lady. In fact, she was everything but—-brunette, stacked and just the right age to consent to anything, even murder. Mike Shayne finds the view from the wrong side of the law can be dangerous, and taking too long a look...deadly.
Armed... Dangerous... book cover
#54

Armed... Dangerous...

1966

Dell 1977 paperback, fine In stock shipped from our UK warehouse
Mermaid on the Rocks book cover
#55

Mermaid on the Rocks

1967

Piece of a Tale When Mike Shayne first saw Kitty Sims, they were skin-diving deep in the Gulf of Mexico. The beautiful blonde really dug the skin part—-in a bikini that covered only the bare essentials. When she spotted Mike, she decided another kind of sport would be more fun, stripped off her bikini bottom, and turned her very tempting tail to head for the surface. Mike started rising the moment she started—-but on her pleasure boat he found sex was only part of the story. Suddenly he was way over his head in a whirlpool of money, menace and murder, hooked by a girl as pretty as a centerfold and dangerous as a shark.
Guilty as Hell book cover
#56

Guilty as Hell

1967

Mystery
So Lush, So Deadly book cover
#57

So Lush, So Deadly

1968

Luscious Dotty De Rham liked her kicks weird and her sex kinky, and she had the looks and money to satisfy her every crazy craving. So, when Dotty's far-out husband ran out on her, she hired Mike Shayne to get him back. At first Mike thought the job was a three-ring circus of fun and games, with the man-eating millionairess, a lustful love queen, and a tempting teenybopper all in the act. Then the murders started, and suddenly Mike was in a carnival of blackmail, arson, adultery and every other cardinal sin, as he raced along a high wire of danger where one false move would be his last… MIKE SHAYNE, THE COOLEST PRIVATE EYE OF THEM ALL, SWINGS INTO RED-HOT ACTION IN ONE OF HIS GREATEST CASES OF MYSTERY AND MAYHEM.
Violence is Golden book cover
#58

Violence is Golden

1968

Originally published in 1968, an entry in the popular Mike Shayne mystery series created by David Dresser and written by Dresser and others.
Fourth Down to Death book cover
#61

Fourth Down to Death

1970

She was a locker room fantasy. She said she was a nurse and made more forward passes at her quarterback patient than either hospital or game rules allowed. Her strategy was deadly, but Mike Shayne couldn't read her signals until the backfield came into motion with killers, one foul play followed another-and someone went out of bounds to score for murder!
Kill All The Young Girls book cover
#65

Kill All The Young Girls

1973

At the Point of a .38 book cover
#68

At the Point of a .38

1974

Million Dollar Handle book cover
#69

Million Dollar Handle

1976

Dead Man's Diary and A Taste for Cognac book cover
#72

Dead Man's Diary and A Taste for Cognac

1959

A double shot of iconic Miami PI Mike Shayne—"one of the best of the tough sleuths" (The New York Times). Dead Man's Diary: Florida private investigator Mike Shayne's in New Orleans at the behest of a distraught wife whose war-hero husband, Jasper Groat, has gone missing—along with his diary, a harrowing soon-to-be-published daily account of being set adrift in a lifeboat with two shipmates. Rumor has it it's also an incriminating confessional. With two corpses—and counting—it looks to Shayne like someone would prefer if Jasper and his damning revelations had been buried at sea. A Taste for Cognac: One minute, PI Mike Shayne's having a quick afternoon cocktail in a Miami dive. The next, he's been solicited to investigate an intoxicating conspiracy involving the parole of an aging bootlegger, a secretive old sea captain tortured to death, a missing female reporter, and two dozen bottles of prewar cognac—vintage, valuable, and apparently worth killing for. If anybody can pop the cork on this case, it's Shayne. Brett Halliday's "fast‐paced world of violence, intrigues, complex twists and voluptuous women" inspired film, radio, and television adaptations, as well as the long-running Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine (The New York Times).

Authors

Franklin Gregory
Author · 2 books
Franklin Long Gregory was born in 1905. He received a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Iowa and began working for The Philadelphia Record in 1936. Around this time, Gregory published the first of his two novels, The Cipher of Death (1934), which would later be followed by The White Wolf (1941). In 1947, Gregory joined the staff of The Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J., where he worked for 25 years, including 20 years as the chief of the Trenton bureau, where he wrote a weekly column. He died in 1980.
Kenneth Fearing
Kenneth Fearing
Author · 7 books

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."

Brett Halliday
Brett Halliday
Author · 60 books

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
Author · 24 books

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.

Jonathan Craig
Author · 5 books
Jonathan Craig was a pseudonym for Frank E. Smith, an American writer who lived in Florida. His series character for most of his novels was PI Pete Selby. He also wrote many short stories.
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