Works
- Jews without Jehovah (1934)
- Men Are So Ardent (1935)
- Night and the City (1938) (ISBN 0-7434-1304-0 - reprint)
- I Got References (1939), stories
- The Nine Lives of Bill Nelson (1942)
- They Die with Their Boots Clean (1942)
- Brain and Ten Fingers (1943)
- Selected Stories (1943)
- The Dead Look On (1943)
- Faces in a Dusty Picture (1944)
- The Horrible Dummy and Other Stories (1944)
- The Weak and the Strong (1945)
- An Ape, a Dog and a Serpent (1945)
- Sergeant Nelson of the Guards (1945)
- Clean, Bright and Slightly Oiled (1946), stories
- Neither Man nor Dog: Short Stories (1946)
- Sad Road to the Sea (1947), stories
- The Song of the Flea (1948)
- Clock Without Hands (1949), stories
- The Thousand Deaths of Mr. Small (1951)
- The Brazen Bull (1952), stories
- Prelude to a Certain Midnight (1953) (ISBN 0-486-24536-5)
- The Great Wash (1953), The Secret Masters in the US
- The Brighton Monster and Other Stories (1953)
- Guttersnipe (1954), stories
- Men Without Bones (1955), stories
- Fowler's End (1958)
- On an Odd Note (1958), stories
- Men Without Bones (US) (1960), stories
- The Ugly Face of Love and Other Stories (1960)
- The Best of Gerald Kersh (1960), edited by Simon Raven
- The Implacable Hunter (1961)
- More Than Once Upon a Time (1964), stories
- The Hospitality of Miss Tolliver (1965), stories
- A Long Cool Day in Hell (1966)
- The Angel and the Cuckoo (1966)
- Nightshade and Damnations (1968), stories, edited by Harlan Ellison
- Brock (1969)
- The Terrible Wild Flowers: Nine Stories (1980)
- Karmesin: The World's Greatest Criminal - or Most Outrageous Liar (2003), stories (ISBN 1-932009-03-5)
- The World, the Flesh, & the Devil: Fantastical Writings, Volume I (2006) (ISBN 1-55310-092-1)
Read more about this topic: Gerald Kersh
Famous quotes containing the word works:
“All his works might well enough be embraced under the title of one of them, a good specimen brick, On Heroes, Hero-Worship, and the Heroic in History. Of this department he is the Chief Professor in the Worlds University, and even leaves Plutarch behind.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“...A shadow now occasionally crossed my simple, sanguine, and life enjoying mind, a notion that I was never really going to accomplish those powerful literary works which would blow a noble trumpet to social generosity and noblesse oblige before the world. What? should I find myself always planning and never achieving ... a richly complicated and yet firmly unified novel?”
—Sarah N. Cleghorn (18761959)
“It [Egypt] has more wonders in it than any other country in the world and provides more works that defy description than any other place.”
—Herodotus (c. 484424 B.C.)