Appleby Stories
Novels
- Death at the President's Lodging (1936) (also known as Seven Suspects)
- Hamlet, Revenge! (1937)
- Lament for a Maker (1938)
- Stop Press (1939) (also known as The Spider Strikes)
- The Secret Vanguard (1940)
- There Came Both Mist and Snow (1940) (also known as A Comedy of Terrors)
- Appleby on Ararat (1941)
- The Daffodil Affair (1942)
- The Weight of the Evidence (1943)
- Appleby's End (1945)
- A Night of Errors (1947)
- Operation Pax (1951) (also known as The Paper Thunderbolt)
- A Private View (1952) (also known as One-Man Show and Murder Is an Art)
- Appleby Plays Chicken (1957) (also known as Death on a Quiet Day)
- The Long Farewell (1958)
- Hare Sitting Up (1959)
- Silence Observed (1961)
- A Connoisseur's Case (1962) (also known as The Crabtree Affair)
- The Bloody Wood (1966)
- Appleby at Allington (1968) (also known as Death by Water)
- A Family Affair (1969) (also known as Picture of Guilt)
- Death at the Chase (1970)
- An Awkward Lie (1971), ISBN 0-396-06345-4
- The Open House (1972), ISBN 0-396-06524-4
- Appleby's Answer (1973), ISBN 0-396-06744-1
- Appleby's Other Story (1974), ISBN 0-396-06715-8
- The Gay Phoenix (1976), ISBN 0-396-07442-1
- The Ampersand Papers (1978), ISBN 0-396-07663-7
- Sheiks and Adders (1982), ISBN 0-396-08063-4
- Appleby and Honeybath (1983), ISBN 0-396-08247-5
- Carson's Conspiracy (1984), ISBN 0-396-08395-1
- Appleby and the Ospreys (1986), ISBN 0-396-08950-X
Short Story Collections
- Appleby Talking (1954) (also known as Dead Man's Shoes)
- Appleby Talks Again (1956)
- Appleby Intervenes (1965)
- The Appleby File (1975), ISBN 0-396-07279-8
- Appleby Talks About Crime (2010), ISBN 978-1-932009-91-0
Read more about this topic: Sir John Appleby
Famous quotes containing the words appleby and/or stories:
“Our sense of worth, of well-being, even our sanity depends upon our remembering. But, alas, our sense of worth, our well-being, our sanity also depend upon our forgetting.”
—Joyce Appleby (b. 1929)
“Fairy tales are loved by the child not because the imagery he finds in them conforms to what goes on within him, but becausedespite all the angry, anxious thoughts in his mind to which the fairy tale gives body and specific contentthese stories always result in a happy outcome, which the child cannot imagine on his own.”
—Bruno Bettelheim (20th century)