|
Shane Craig Stevens (born October 8, 1937) is an American author of crime novels. His parents are John and Caroline (Royale) Stevens. His novels include ''Go Down Dead'' (1966), ''Way Uptown in Another World'' (1971), ''Dead City'' (1973), ''Rat Pack'' (1974), ''By Reason of Insanity'' (1979), and ''The Anvil Chorus'' (1985). Stephen King wrote an appreciation of Stevens in the Afterword of his novel ''The Dark Half'' and paid tribute to him in that book, in which Thad Beaumont writes violent crime novels starring a character named "Alexis Machine," a reference to a character from Stevens' novel ''Dead City''. In Stevens' novel ''By Reason of Insanity'' the serial killer character, Thomas Bishop, believes he is the son of Caryl Chessman, who was executed in 1960 for various crimes including rape and kidnapping. The hero of his later novel ''The Anvil Chorus'', a Paris police inspector, is an Alsatian Jew apparently related to Alfred Dreyfus. Stevens also wrote two crime novels under the pseudonym J.W. Rider: ''Jersey Tomatoes'' (Arbor 1986); ''Hot Tickets'' (Arbor 1987). The protagonist is Ryder Malone in both novels. The setting is New Jersey. (Reference: Allen J. Hubin: Crime Fiction IV. A Comprehensive Bibliography, 1749-2000, 2010 Revised Edition (Locus Press)). Malone is an extremely tough private detective who specializes in cases of murder. ==References== *() 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Shane Stevens (author)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|