Chester K. Steele
Chester K. Steele was a house pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate for a series of mystery books.
These were aimed at an older audience than most of the other syndicate books.
The first title, The Mansion of Mystery, was written by Edward Stratemeyer, and the rest were ghostwritten.
Chester K. Steele Books
- The Mansion of Mystery (1911)
- The Diamond Cross Mystery (1918)
- The Golf Course Mystery (1919)
- The Crime at Red Towers (1927)
- The House of Disappearances (1927)
- The Great Radio Mystery (1928)
gollark: It's just sqrt(anti)rally.
gollark: I think that would be a rally against a rally against a rally against a rally. It's hard to say. Rally stopped sounding like an actual word some time ago.
gollark: Anti³rally⁴ when?
gollark: Current historians increasingly use lots of past records to assemble a more complete picture of history, instead of just looking at things explicitly written as historical records. There's no reason to think future ones wouldn't do this even more, and we have a *lot* of data on random unimportant people, and the ability to store it basically forever (unless there's some kind of civilizational collapse, in which case it will all just disintegrate into half-remembered legends).
gollark: Hmm. Discord is rebelling and refusing to display an embed.
References
External links
- Works by Chester K. Steele at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Chester K. Steele at Internet Archive
- Works by Chester K. Steele at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
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