Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Ellery Queen" ¶ 181
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

pt and Ellery
pt: William Ellery Channing
pt: Ellery Clark
pt: George Ellery Hale

pt and Queen
pt: Queen ( desambiguação )
pt: Queen
pt: The Queen of the Damned
pt: Condado de King and Queen
pt: Queen Creek
pt: Queen Valley
pt: De Queen
pt: Queen City ( Missouri )
pt: Queen City ( Texas )
pt: Queen Anne
pt: All Hail the Queen
pt: God Save the Queen ( Sex Pistols )
pt: Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen
pt: The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert
pt: Queen Emeraldas
pt: Ivy Queen
pt: Categoria: Condado de Queen Anne's
pt: Estação Queen ( TTC )
pt: Queen Anne's Men
pt: Queen of Outer Space
pt: Queen Christina

Ellery and Queen
The " puzzle " approach was carried even further into ingenious and seemingly impossible plots by John Dickson Carr — also writing as Carter Dickson — who is regarded as the master of the " locked room mystery ", and Cecil Street, who also wrote as John Rhode, whose detective, Dr. Priestley, specialised in elaborate technical devices, while in the US the whodunnit was adopted and extended by Rex Stout and Ellery Queen, among others.
The first amateur railway detective, Thorpe Hazell, was created by Victor Whitechurch and his stories impressed Ellery Queen and Dorothy L. Sayers.
A collective name or collective pseudonym is one shared by two or more persons, for example the co-authors of a work, such as Ellery Queen, or Bourbaki.
Frederic Dannay and Manfred Lee used the name Ellery Queen as both a pen name for their collaborative works and as the name of their main character.
Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee published their mystery novels and stories under the pen name Ellery Queen ( as well as publishing the work of ghost-writers under the same name ).
Ellery Queen and Nero Wolfe are other popular subjects of mystery parodies and pastiches.
Others — S. S. Van Dine, John Dickson Carr, and Ellery Queen — were American, but imitated the " English " style.
* Ellery Queen: The Campus Murders
Mystery author Ellery Queen can also be considered a " fictional artist " of sorts, though the proverbial line between his " true-life " and " fictional " exploits are generally very blurred.
The most notorious case of this took place on the Seinfeld television series ; it has also happened on other shows including The X-Files, Stargate SG1 and the short-lived Ellery Queen series.
This and the following eight digest collections were compiled and edited by Fred Dannay ( one-half of Ellery Queen ) with Hammett's permission.
* Ellery Queen ( 1 episode, 1976 )
Ellery Queen is both a fictional character and a pseudonym used by two American cousins from Brooklyn, New York-Daniel Nathan, alias Frederic Dannay ( October 20, 1905 – September 3, 1982 ) and Manford ( Emanuel ) Lepofsky, alias Manfred Bennington Lee ( January 11, 1905 – April 3, 1971 )-to write, edit, and anthologize detective fiction.
The fictional Ellery Queen created by Dannay and Lee is a mystery writer and amateur detective who helps his father, a New York City police inspector, solve baffling murders.
In a successful series of novels and short stories that covered 42 years, " Ellery Queen " served as a joint pseudonym for the cousins Dannay and Lee, as well as the name of the primary detective-hero they created.
The fictional Ellery Queen was the hero of more than 30 novels and several short story collections written by Dannay and Lee and published under the Ellery Queen pseudonym.
They allowed the Ellery Queen name to be used as a house name for a number of novels written by other authors, most of them published in the 1960s as paperback originals and not featuring Ellery Queen as a character.
According to critic Otto Penzler, " As an anthologist, Ellery Queen is without peer, his taste unequalled.
Indeed, Ellery Queen clearly is, after Poe, the most important American in mystery fiction.

2.769 seconds.