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The Avengers book cover 1
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The Avengers
Series · 8 books · 1967-1968

Books in series

The Floating Game book cover
#1

The Floating Game

1967

While EMMA PEEL is preparing to depart for the United States as the bride of a gorgeous female Russian spy, JOHN STEED is tracking down the toughest Mafia gangster who ever graced the shores of Britain to overthrow Her Majesty's Government... You see, someone is attempting to undermine the British government by means of a fiendish Oriental brainwashing technique on high-ranking civil servants, and Steed and Mrs. Peel find that all the clues lead to a joint Mafia-Russian plot, which, naturally, must be stopped at all costs!
The Laugh Was on Lazarus book cover
#2

The Laugh Was on Lazarus

1967

What is the world coming to when... + Men are raised from the dead + to become zombies + commanded to trap JOHN STEED and EMMA PEEL in the Highgate Mausoleum + only to end up being stabbed to death by the umbrella-wielding Mrs. PEEL? What does it all add up to—this unorthodox melange of transplanted brains, jellied hearts, and homicidal seductresses? The answer is—a horrifying plot against the Pentagon, which will be H-bombed unless certain diabolical forces are stopped at once!
The Passing of Gloria Munday book cover
#3

The Passing of Gloria Munday

1967

Can Emma Peel further her career as lady spy by becoming a top pop singer idolized by millions? There was more to singer Gloria Munday's death than simply murder, and so Steed puts Mrs. Peel on the job. Luckily she can belt out a song with bazazz, because by stepping into Gloria Munday's shoes she can find out a thing or tow. Only she doesn't count on taking a nine-hour swim in the deep blue sea with an unscruplulous sadist at her heels while Steed is locked behind stout prision bars. The Passing of Gloria Munday is an original adventure based on ABC-TC's world-famous thriller series, staring Patrick Macnee and Diana Rigg. The End.
Heil Harris book cover
#4

Heil Harris

1967

IS HITLER REALLY DEAD? Or is he about to celebrate his 78th birthday, while living in exile in Hertfordshire....? John Steed is more than puzzled by the identity of an old man who calls himself Herr Harris, and is involved in the practice of strange, mystic rites in the Herts Countryside. But Steed finds, to his shocked surprise, an even greater danger is in store for... EMMA PEEL is about to become the dictator of Great Britain!
The Afrit Affair book cover
#5

The Afrit Affair

1968

JOHN STEED RECEIVED THE FIRST WARNING MESSAGE WRAPPED IN A PIECE OF KIPPERED HERRING: I WILL STRIKE WHEN AND WHERE I DESIRE, SIGNED: THE AFRIT THE SECOND WAS SQUEEZED OUT OF A TUBE OF TOOTHPASTE: THE AFRIT STRIKES. TRY AND STOP HIM! Stranger and stranger things began to appear: giant footprints of a monster, murderous flying anvils, one-eared corpses, ticking bombs in the basement. Steed and Emma Peel hastened to discover the Afrit's identity—before he made his final strike....
The Drowned Queen book cover
#6

The Drowned Queen

1968

CAN EVEN THE AVENGERS PREVENT SABOTAGE ON THE MAIDEN VOYAGE OF THE "ATLANTIC QUEEN," THE FIRST SUBMARINE LUXURY LINER? As cover for this assignment, British agent John Steed is ship's dancing instructor, while his beautiful new partner, Tara King, travels as ship's physiotherapist. Surrounded by suspicious characters, such as the so-called magician's assistant, Miss Goldspangle, the ill-fated Mr. Funfinger, and that booming battle-ax Mrs. Thwaite-Funderpump, Steed and Tara make their hazardous way through various red-herrings—and scaly green mermen—STRAIGHT INTO THE JAWS OF DEATH!
The Gold Bomb book cover
#7

The Gold Bomb

1968

ALL SIGNS POINT to the strong probability that somewhere in Merrie Old England, someone, for some purpose unknown (but certainly criminal) is building himself an atom bomb! Obviously, it's a situation that requires the immediate attention of The Avengers - John Steed and Tara King - and they promptly swing into action. The two search everywhere for clues - from jewelers' shops to a gypsy encampment - at one point the elegant Steed even descends from his stately Bentley to career about the countryside all day on a bicycle! Time is running out. CAN THE AVENGERS FIND THIS MANIAC BEFORE HE OR SHE BLOWS UP HALF OF ENGLAND?
The Magnetic Man book cover
#8

The Magnetic Man

1968

Another Novel from the ABC Televison Series. Super-agent John Steed goes to Hong Kong to pick up a suitcase filled with valuable papers. Steed is in Hong Kong less than an hour when he's knocked unconscious, and the contents of the case are mysteriously swithced - to a hugh sum of money! Back goes Steed to London. There, he and Tara King set to work baiting a trap for the owners of the fantastic fortune foisted off on him - a trap that almost snaps shut on The Avengers themselves! Da da dum!

Authors

Keith Laumer
Keith Laumer
Author · 78 books

John Keith Laumer was an American science fiction author. Prior to becoming a full-time writer, he was an officer in the U.S. Air Force and a U.S. diplomat. His brother March Laumer was also a writer, known for his adult reinterpretations of the Land of Oz (also mentioned in Keith's The Other Side of Time). Keith Laumer (aka J.K Laumer, J. Keith Laumer) is best known for his Bolo stories and his satirical Retief series. The former chronicles the evolution of juggernaut-sized tanks that eventually become self-aware through the constant improvement resulting from centuries of intermittent warfare against various alien races. The latter deals with the adventures of a cynical spacefaring diplomat who constantly has to overcome the red-tape-infused failures of people with names like Ambassador Grossblunder. The Retief stories were greatly influenced by Laumer's earlier career in the United States Foreign Service. In an interview with Paul Walker of Luna Monthly, Laumer states "I had no shortage of iniquitous memories of the Foreign Service." Four of his shorter works received Hugo or Nebula Award nominations (one of them, "In the Queue", received nominations for both) and his novel A Plague of Demons was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1966. During the peak years of 1959–1971, Laumer was a prolific science fiction writer, with his novels tending to follow one of two patterns: fast-paced, straight adventures in time and space, with an emphasis on lone-wolf, latent superman protagonists, self-sacrifice and transcendence or, broad comedies, sometimes of the over-the-top variety. In 1971, Laumer suffered a stroke while working on the novel The Ultimax Man. As a result, he was unable to write for a few years. As he explained in an interview with Charles Platt published in The Dream Makers (1987), he refused to accept the doctors' diagnosis. He came up with an alternative explanation and developed an alternative (and very painful) treatment program. Although he was unable to write in the early 1970s, he had a number of books which were in the pipeline at the time of the stroke published during that time. In the mid-1970s, Laumer partially recovered from the stroke and resumed writing. However, the quality of his work suffered and his career declined (Piers Anthony, How Precious Was That While, 2002). In later years Laumer also reused scenarios and characters from his earlier works to create "new" books, which some critics felt was to their detriment: Alas, Retief to the Rescue doesn't seem so much like a new Retief novel, but a kind of Cuisnart mélange of past books. — Somtow Sucharitkul (Washington Post, Mar 27, 1983. p. BW11) His Bolo creations were popular enough that other authors have written standalone science-fiction novels about them. Laumer was also a model airplane enthusiast, and published two dozen designs between 1956 and 1962 in the U.S. magazines Air Trails, Model Airplane News and Flying Models, as well as the British magazine Aero Modeler. He published one book on the subject, How to Design and Build Flying Models in 1960. His later designs were mostly gas-powered free flight planes, and had a whimsical charm with names to match, like the "Twin Lizzie" and the "Lulla-Bi". His designs are still being revisited, reinvented and built today.

John Garforth
John Garforth
Author · 4 books

I spent thirty years as a local government officer – in libraries and the arts, beginning in London and ending up in Blackburn as a Principal Officer. Simultaneously earning more money from a career as a hack novelist and journalist to support a wife and three children. I took early retirement in the 1980s and ran the Theatre of the Unemployed at Tamworth Arts Centre for the next seven years. This ended when my leading professional actor died (see the Sam Whitbread thread of my Ankerside novel). It is a convention that local government officers cannot be active in local politics. My political activities of the 50s and 60s (CND, Committee of 100) had ceased, especially as I climbed the career ladder. But in the 1990s I resumed local politics, becoming first a borough councillor and then a county councillor. What might be called a gamekeeper turned poacher. I wrote 16 hack novels – television spin-offs, ghosting and the like. I wrote 17 plays over the years but most of them for specific occasions or specific casts or to meet specific regional arts association criteria.

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