Leonard Gribble
Leonard Reginald Gribble (1 February 1908–27 September 1985) was a prolific writer from Devon.[1][2][3][4] His novels often focussed on the particulars of policing and the judicial system.[1] Gribble also wrote under the pseudonyms Sterry Browning, Leo Grex, Louis Grey, Piers Marlow, Dexter Muir and Bruce Sanders; he also wrote some Westerns, under the name Landon Grant.[1][3]
Leonard Reginald Gribble | |
---|---|
Born | South Lambeth London, U.K. | 1 February 1908
Died | 27 September 1985 77) Worthing, Sussex | (aged
Pen name | Leo Grex, Sterry Browning, Louis Grey, Dexter Muir, Landon Grant, Piers Marlowe, Bruce Sanders |
Occupation | Novelist |
Language | English |
Notable works | The Arsenal Stadium Mystery |
Website | |
petersfraserdunlop |
Gribble was one of the founding members of the Crime Writers' Association in 1953.[1]
Bibliography
- The Case of the Marsden Rubies (1929)
- The Gillespie Suicide Mystery (1929)
- The Grand Modena Murder (1930)
- Is this Revenge (1931) aka The Serpentine Murder
- The Stolen Home Secretary (1932) aka The Stolen Statesman
- The Secret of Tangles (1933)
- The Yellow Bungalow (1933)
- The Death Chime (1934)
- The Riddle of the Ravens (1934)
- Mystery at Tudor Arches (1935)
- The Case of the Malverne Diamonds (1936)
- Riley of the Special Branch (1936)
- Who Killed Oliver Cromwell? (1937)
- The Case Book of Anthony Slade (1937)
- Tragedy in E Flat (1938)
- The Arsenal Stadium Mystery (1939)
- Atomic Murder (1947)
- Hangman’s Moon (1950)
- They Kidnapped Stanley Matthews (1950)
- The Frightened Chameleon (1950)
- Mystery Manor (1951)
- The Glass Alibi (1952)
- The Velvet Mask (1952)
- Murder Out of Season (1952)
- She Died Laughing (1953)
- Murder Mistaken (1953) with Janet Green
- The Inverted Crime (1954)
- Sally of Scotland Yard (1954) with Geraldine Laws
- Death Pays the Piper (1956)
- Superintendent Slade Investigates (1956)
- Stand In for Murder (1957)
- Don’t Argue with Death (1959)
- Wantons Die Hard (1961)
- Heads You Die (1964)
- The Violent Dark (1965)
- Strip Tease Macabre (1967)
- A Diplomat Dies (1969)
- Alias the Victim (1971)
- Programmed for Death (1973)
- You Can’t Die Tomorrow (1975)
- Midsummer Slay Ride (1976)
- Crime on Her Hands (1977)
- Death Needs No Alibi (1979)
- Dead End in Mayfair (1981)
- The Dead Don’t Scream (1983)
As Leo Grex
- The Tragedy at Draythorpe Hutchinson (1931)
- The Nightborn (1931)
- The Lonely Inn Mystery (1933)
- The Madison Murder (1933)
- The Man from Manhattan (1934)
- Murder in the Sanctuary (1934)
- Crooner’s Swan Song (1935)
- Stolen Death (1936)
- Transatlantic Trouble (1937)
- The Carlent Manor Crime (1939)
- The Black Out Murders (1940)
- The Stalag Mites (1947)
- King Spiv (1948)
- Crooked Sixpence (1949)
- Ace of Danger (1952)
- Thanks for the Felony (1958)
- Larceny in Her Heart (1959)
- Terror Wears a Smile (1962)
- The Brass Knuckle (1964)
- Violent Keepsake (1967)
- The Hard Kill (1969)
- Kill Now Pay Later (1971)
- Die as in Murder (1974)
- Death Throws No Shadow (1976)
- Mix Me a Murder (1978)
- Hot Ice (1983)
As Louis Grey
- The Signet of Death (1934)
As Dexter Muir
- The Pilgrims Meet Murder (1948)
- The Speckled Swan (1949)
- Rosemary for Death (1953)
As Sterry Browning
- Crime at Cape Folly (1951)
- Sex Marks the Spot (1954)
gollark: Anyway, do you want a particularly portable laptop or do you not care much?
gollark: (or better)
gollark: The boost clocks are higher though, so it's probably about the same on single-core tasks.
gollark: Look at the i5-7200U vs i5-8250U. They have the same 15W TDP (not that Intel make that very meaningful) but the 7200U has half the cores and higher base clocks.
gollark: Yes. They used to have 2 cores.
References
- Gribble, Leonard (10 July 2018). The Arsenal Stadium Mystery. British Library Crime Classics. British Library Publishing. ISBN 9780712352260.
- "The Arsenal stadium mystery". SOLO. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- "Leonard Gribble". Peters, Fraser & Dunlop. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- "Leonard Reginald Gribble". IMDb. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
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