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Snow (Walter) Papers
Summary Information
- Repository:
- Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Library
- Creator:
- Snow, Walter, 1905-1973
- Title:
- Walter Snow Papers
- ID:
- 1975.0005
- Date [inclusive]:
- undated, 1926-1973
- Physical Description:
- 7.5 Linear Feet
- Language of the Material:
- English
- Abstract:
- The papers include the correspondence, short stories, journalistic articles, correspondence, poems, novels, and plays of journalist, essayist, novelist and pulp fiction writer, Walter Snow.
Preferred Citation
[Item description, #:#], Walter Snow Papers. Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Library.
Biography
Walter Snow (1905-1973) was a pulp fiction writer, mystery novelist, socialist essayist, and newspaper journalist. He spent much of his early life attempting to fulfill his ambition of becoming a great proletariat writer. Snow became, instead, a successful journalist, a prolific writer of adventure and detective stories, and of realistic short fiction. Snow's writing style is characterized by his ability to bring his characters to life. When writing as a journalist, Snow utilized his ability as a detailed storyteller to illuminate the nature of the person he was writing about. Snow was alternately published under the pen names Chris Graham in his early pulp fiction writings as well as Robert Clark in his socialist essays.
Snow was born on 19 February 1905 in Gardner, Massachusetts, to Robert O. Snow and Emma Groszmann. Growing up, Snow attended schools in both Connecticut and Massachusetts. He graduated from South Hadley, Massachusetts High School in 1921. Snow was part of the fifth generation of his family to work as a laborer. Snow began working in the American Thread Company textile mills of South Hadley, Massachusetts, during the summer of 1920. Following high school, Snow worked in Willimantic, Connecticut, at the American Thread Company. From 1921 until 1924, Snow held a variety of positions such as jag boy, thread carrier, Order's Department "chaser", and as Works Department timekeeper and clerk. He was laid off during the retrenchment just before the six-month 1925 strike.
Snow witnessed strikers evicted from their company-owned housing; left to freeze on the roadside of Route 6 during the winter months. National Guardsmen called in and compensated by the mill owners, treated strikers in some cases violently. With the help of a loosely formed union, strikers were able to return to their homes and avoid starvation and death. By working in the mills and witnessing the mistreatment of workers like him, Snow experienced inadequate working conditions, which inspired his social activism and fostered his socialist viewpoints. Following his time working at American Thread, Snow moved to New York City. Upon arriving in New York, he went to work as a stagehand and scene painter for the Providence Playhouse in Greenwich Village under Eugene O'Neil. He also married his first wife, Edith, in 1926.
During the 1920s-1930s, Snow lived primarily in New York City. From 1925-1930, Snow was a police reporter and rewrite man. Throughout the 1930s, Snow worked primarily as a reporter for The Home News reviewing films and plays. Associated with the New York Rebel Poets, Snow began writing prose and poetry for magazines following the Sacco-Vanzetti executions in 1927. He met and worked with contempoJack Conroy and Philip Rahv, who advocated workers rights and socialist attitudes. From the late 1920s to the early 1930s, Snow was actively involved with the Communist party and John Reed Club. In the middle of the 1930s, Snow ceased active involvement in the party and club, but continued his literary involvement in the movement. With Conroy, Snow served as a co-editor of The Anvil until it merged with Rahv's Partisan Review. His articles were also featured in New Masses and International Literature. He served as a volunteer organizer for the Newspaper Guild and the American Labor party toward the end of the 1930s. During this period, Snow moved from New York City to Chaplin, CT, then Willimantic, CT, and by the end of the 1930s was again living in New York City.
Despite numerous attempts to make their marriage a success, Snow was no longer married to his wife Edith by the beginning of World War II. Snow served in the military in Georgia during World War II in 1943. It is unclear how long he was active in the armed forces. Snow wrote sparingly during this decade.
Following World War II, Snow left New York and returned to Connecticut. Snow eventually met Flora Huffman whom he would marry and remain married to for the duration of his life. He had a daughter and a stepson, Maurice Isserman. In the early the 1950s, Snow was primarily writing for the pulp fiction market. Snow was published in pulp fiction magazines including Gang World, Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine, Short Stories, and Suspect Detective Stories. Seven of his mysteries were anthologized in six hardcover and three paperback books including 1951's 20 Great Tales of Murder, and 1970's With Malice Towards All. Snow wrote two mystery novels, 1952's The Golden Nightmare, and 1972's The Gauguin Murders (unpublished). His final work The Glory and the Shame, a collection of his poetry from 1927-1972, was published in 1973.
While never abandoning writing fiction, by the middle of the 1960s, Snow was making a transition back to journalism. Snow started working as a free-lance correspondent for the Willimantic Chronicle. He continued to work in a variety of positions for the Chronicle until his retirement in 1973. Snow was a correspondent who covered the Connecticut General Assembly, a part-time reviewer of plays at the University of Connecticut, as well as the paper's editor, a position that his father once held. Snow was a member of the Laurel Club>, which is an organization of legislative correspondents. He was known as a conscientious newsman who was deeply interested in civil rights and the human condition.
Walter Snow died in 1973.
Scope and Content
The Walter Snow Papers contain the surviving manuscripts of Walter Snow (both published and unpublished). These works include short stories, journalistic articles, correspondence, poems, novels, and plays. Most of Snow's surviving correspondence relates to his attempts to get his works published. The bulk of the remaining correspondence contains information about Snow's involvement with The Anvil, which he edited with Jack Conroy and others in the early 1930s. The collection also contains notes, outlines, and print ephemera. This collection contains extensive materials prior to 1940 and for the period from 1956 until his death in 1973. In the early 1930s, Snow began a project on the textile industry in southern New England. While he never finished the novel, the notes on the textile mills may be of use to scholars interested in textile mills during this period.
Arrangement
Series I: Biographical Material (undated, 1930-1973) includes portions of Snow's journal, notebook, and an extensive collection of biographical information that Snow gave to editors. Obituaries and articles written about Snow are also contained in this series. Finally, this series contains information about the merger of The Anvil and Partisan Review from Snow and Jack Conroy.
Series II: Correspondence (undated, 1927-1930, 1971-1973) contains surviving correspondence not filed with published works. The bulk of the correspondence was with fellow writers and/or editors including Hayden Carruth, Jack Conroy, Seymour Ponds, and A.H. Sinks.
Series III: Journalistic Work (undated, 1927-1941, 1959-1973) is divided into manuscripts and clippings of published works. The bulk of the manuscripts are articles submitted to publications such as The Anvil. The earliest clippings are film and drama reviews for The Home News. Starting in 1959, Snow returned to journalism. He wrote reviews of plays at the University of Connecticut as well as travel pieces, which are also evidenced in the clippings.
Series IV: Fictional Works (undated, 1928-1973) encompasses primarily typed manuscripts of Snow's novels, plays, and poetry. It includes not only the written works, but also any notes and correspondence relevant to Snow's writings.
Series V: Short Fiction (undated, 1928-1933, 1941-1970) includes typed manuscripts of Snow's short stories with notes and correspondence. Writing for mostly pulp publications, short stories are the most extensive genre of fiction in which Snow wrote. The items are order chronologically by place of residence as indicated by Snow and then by date.
Series V: Notes (undated, 1926-1972) contains outlines and notes by Snow for potential works. It also contains some analysis of works of fiction by other writers.
Series VI: Ephemera (undated, circa 1930-1973) includes a wide variety of materials. The bulk of this series contains newspaper clippings written by others. It also contains typed manuscripts of three stories for The Anvil by other authors that were possibly edited by Snow.
Series VII: Pulp Literature (1931-1968) contains published copies of Snow's work. These items are very fragile and access is at the Curator's discretion.
Eric Carlson, a friend of Snow and professor of English at the University of Connecticut, organized the papers originally. In 1981, staff reorganized pieces of the collection and created the original finding aid.
Administrative Information
Publication Statement
Archives & Special Collections at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, University of Connecticut Library
University of Connecticut Library405 Babbidge Road Unit 1205Storrs, Connecticut 06269-1205archives@uconn.eduURL: http://lib.uconn.edu/libraries/asc/
Revision Description
Revised for consistency 2017 November
Restrictions on Use
Permission to publish from these Papers must be obtained in writing from the owner(s) of the copyright.
Acquisition Information
The materials in this collection were donated shortly after Walter Snow's death in 1973.
Access
The collection is open and available for research.
Controlled Access Headings
- New York (inhabited place)
- Poets, American
- Periodical editors
- Fiction
- Journalism
- Coventry (inhabited place)
- Illinois (state)
- Detective and mystery stories
- Radicalism
- Social movements
- Communism
- Employees
- Rebel poets -- New York (State) -- New York.
- Labor unions
- Labor unions-Organizing
- Press
- Connecticut (state)
- New York (State)
- Editors
- American literature
- Literature
- Political participation
- Twentieth century.
- Photographs
- Notebooks
- American newspapers
- Authors, American
- Publications (documents)
- American poetry
- Willimantic (inhabited place)
- Correspondence
- Socialism
- Pulps (document genre)
- Manuscripts (document genre)
- Newspapers
- Poems
- Obituaries
- Monographs
- Notes
- United States (nation)
- Photocopies
- Typescripts
- Periodicals
- Scripts (documents)
- Snow, Walter, 1905-1973
Bibliography
Exiles from a Future Time. Alan M. Wald; 2002. Worker-writer in Americirca Douglas Wixson; 1999.
Collection Inventory
Series I: Biographical Material, undated, 1930-1973 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Title/Description | Instances | ||
Biographical Information | |||
box 1 | folder 1 | ||
Biographical summaries for editors and correspondents | |||
box 1 | folder 2 | ||
Notes and papers related to first wife, Edna | |||
box 1 | folder 3 | ||
Notes written about his family | |||
box 1 | folder 4 | ||
Journal | |||
box 1 | folder 5 | ||
Notebook | |||
box 1 | folder 6 | ||
Clippings about Snow | |||
box 1 | folder 7 | ||
Clippings about second wife Flora or stepson Maurice Isserman | |||
box 1 | folder 8 | ||
Information about the merger of The Anvil and The Partisans Review with "That Literary Shotgun Marriage" submitted by Walt Snow, 1973 | |||
box 1 | folder 9 | ||
Series II: Correspondence, undated, 1927-1930, 1971-1973 | |||
Title/Description | Instances | ||
Ackerson, Jack, 1932-1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 10 | ||
Axelrod, T., 1932-1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 11 | ||
Bates, Harry, 1929 | |||
box 1 | folder 12 | ||
Beckwith, Russell, 1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 13 | ||
Blunder, Edmund, 1971 | |||
box 1 | folder 14 | ||
Brown, Haywood, 1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 15 | ||
Brown, Katherine (RKO Radio Pictures), 1932-1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 16 | ||
Burns, 1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 17 | ||
Cacciatore, Vera, 1971 | |||
box 1 | folder 18 | ||
Carmon, Walt, 1930-1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 19 | ||
Carruth, Hayden, 1971-1972 | |||
box 1 | folder 20 | ||
Carruth, Hayden, 1973 | |||
box 1 | folder 21 | ||
Cave, Hugh, 1932-1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 22 | ||
Chadwick, Paul, 1963 | |||
box 1 | folder 23 | ||
Chalmers, [Mr.], 1932 | |||
box 1 | folder 24 | ||
Clements, A.E., 1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 25 | ||
Colvin, Ken C., undated, 1927-1929 | |||
box 1 | folder 26 | ||
Colyer, Noel [Dr. and Mrs.], 1971 | |||
box 1 | folder 27 | ||
Conklin, Margaret (Macmillan Co.), 1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 28 | ||
Conroy, Jack, 1930-1933 | |||
box 1 | folder 29 | ||
Conroy, Jack, 1969-1973 | |||
box 1 | folder 30 | ||
Cromie, Bob, 1973 | |||
box 2 | folder 31 | ||
Gordon, David (Daily World), 1972 | |||
box 2 | folder 32 | ||
Gunn, Harold, 1973 | |||
box 2 | folder 33 | ||
Hagglund, Ben C., 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 34 | ||
Harrison, Charles Yale, 1930 | |||
box 2 | folder 35 | ||
Hicks, Granville, 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 36 | ||
Hilburn, 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 37 | ||
Houghton, Arthur [Mrs.], 1971 | |||
box 2 | folder 38 | ||
Isserman, Maurice (stepson), 1972 | |||
box 2 | folder 39 | ||
Jarraboe, George, 1932-1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 40 | ||
James, Kelly, 1973 | |||
box 2 | folder 41 | ||
Kalar, John, 1932 | |||
box 2 | folder 42 | ||
Koheuhausin, Louise (cousin), 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 43 | ||
Lewis, C. Day, 1971 | |||
box 2 | folder 44 | ||
Linden, [Dr.], 1962 | |||
box 2 | folder 45 | ||
Malone, Marvin (Wormwood Review), 1971-1973 | |||
box 2 | folder 46 | ||
Massur, Hal (Mystery Writers of America), 1970-1971 | |||
box 2 | folder 47 | ||
Maybocci, Antoinette, 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 48 | ||
Medary, Majorie, 1969, 1971 | |||
box 2 | folder 49 | ||
Moravsky, Maria, 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 50 | ||
Moroze, Lewis (American Dialog), 1972 | |||
box 2 | folder 51 | ||
Peizner, J. (New Masses), 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 52 | ||
Pollett, Joseph, 1930 | |||
box 2 | folder 53 | ||
Ponds, Seymour, 1927-1931 | |||
box 2 | folder 54 | ||
Publicity Department, Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 55 | ||
Publicity Department, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 56 | ||
Rich, H. Thompson, 1929 | |||
box 2 | folder 57 | ||
Roberts, J., 1968 | |||
box 2 | folder 58 | ||
Rogers, John C., 1932-1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 59 | ||
"Salty Bill" (Doubleday), 1928 | |||
box 2 | folder 60 | ||
Singleton, Nina, 1972 | |||
box 2 | folder 61 | ||
Sinks, A. H., 1929, 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 62 | ||
Smith, Bernard, 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 63 | ||
"Smith, Harry" Sidney Bernard ed. Newsletter on the state of culture),, 1972 | |||
box 2 | folder 64 | ||
Spector, Herman (Dynamo), 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 65 | ||
Spier, Lewis, 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 66 | ||
Sternberg, Ann, 1968 | |||
box 2 | folder 67 | ||
Stevens, Karey, undated | |||
box 2 | folder 68 | ||
Vassallo, Carol, 1971 | |||
box 2 | folder 69 | ||
Wagner, Charles A. (Poetry Society of America), 1972-1973 | |||
box 2 | folder 70 | ||
Walker, V. B., 1929 | |||
box 2 | folder 71 | ||
Weiss, H. G., 1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 72 | ||
Wellington, Grace, 1932-1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 73 | ||
White, Gail, 1973 | |||
box 2 | folder 74 | ||
Wilsack, John, 1932-1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 75 | ||
Unidentified Correspondence, 1932-1933 | |||
box 2 | folder 76 | ||
Unidentified Correspondence, undated, 1971-1973 | |||
box 2 | folder 77 | ||
Series III: Journalistic Works, undated, 1927-1941, 1959-1973 | |||
Title/Description | Instances | ||
Subseries A: Manuscripts, undated, 1930-1973 | |||
"Fiction Crime Slave", 1930 | |||
box 3 | folder 78 | ||
"Red Lights on Grub Street", 1931 | |||
box 3 | folder 79 | ||
"The Flaming Torch Messiahs Squabble", 1932 | |||
box 3 | folder 80 | ||
Book Reviews for The Anvil, 1932-1933 | |||
box 3 | folder 81 | ||
Review of Red Songbook, 1932 December 10 | |||
"From Mountaineers to Revolutionists" (Review of To Make My Bread), 1933 January 16 | |||
"The Heroes of Blup" (Review of The Bulpington of Blup), 1933 June 6 | |||
"Underdogs and Inflation", 1933 | |||
box 3 | folder 82 | ||
"Grub-street--1933", 1933 | |||
box 3 | folder 83 | ||
"The Renaissance of American Proletarian Literature", 1934 | |||
box 3 | folder 84 | ||
Articles published in New Masses, 1934 | |||
box 3 | folder 85 | ||
"Flying Squadron Crash Through", 1934 September 19 | |||
"45,000 Strikers Fight Rhode Island Terror", 1934 September 25 | |||
"For Russell Beckwith", circa 1930s | |||
box 3 | folder 86 | ||
"Grub Street in Hooverland", circa 1930s | |||
box 3 | folder 87 | ||
Max Eastman's Marx and Lenin", circa 1930s | |||
box 3 | folder 88 | ||
"Sweatshop Paradise Guaranteed", circa 1930s | |||
box 3 | folder 89 | ||
"The Anvil and Proletarian Short Story", circa 1930s | |||
box 3 | folder 90 | ||
Letters for New Masses Reader's Forum", 1941 May 19, 1941 May 31 | |||
box 3 | folder 91 | ||
"Readers Report on Manhattan Homestead: Freelance Living by Daniel and Marion Whedon", 1941 October 11, 1941 November 15 | |||
box 3 | folder 92 | ||
Letter to the Editor of New York Herald Tribune, "Answer to Toni Stopler and Other Detractors of Pearl Buck and Walter Lippmann", 1942 February 28 | |||
box 3 | folder 93 | ||
Original Manuscript of the review of Watch on the Rhine for The Home News, 1943 | |||
box 3 | folder 94 | ||
Original Manuscript of "Liberty Goes to the Movies" (Review of Jane Eyre), 1944 February 11 | |||
box 3 | folder 95 | ||
"Who Says Short Story is Dead!" for Writer's Digest, 1965 December 8 | |||
box 3 | folder 96 | ||
Potential article on Marcia Savella, 1969 May 9 | |||
box 3 | folder 97 | ||
"Dramatic Monologue on Hawthorne's Problems", (unpublished), 1971 September 29 | |||
box 3 | folder 98 | ||
Auto-biographical article/publicity piece, 1973 January 22 | |||
box 3 | folder 99 | ||
"Poetic Prostitutes of the Spooks" submitted to Daily World, 1973 March 31 | |||
box 3 | folder 100 | ||
Book review of Residence on Earth by Paul Neruda and Letter to the Editor about Neruda submitted to New York Times, circa 1973 June 5 | |||
box 3 | folder 101 | ||
"Atheism: A Partial Foundation for Proletarian Poetry", undated | |||
box 3 | folder 102 | ||
Subseries B: Clippings, undated, 1927-1971 | |||
Articles printed in The Daily Worker, 1927-1928 | |||
box 16 | |||
"A New American Epic", undated | |||
"Mrs. Rose Sacco: A Fighter", 1927 August 31 | |||
"Karlin Disobeys Orders", 1927 September 1 | |||
"Leary and Labor", 1927 September 3 | |||
"Reading 'Between the Lines' about Paris", 1927 September 20 | |||
"'Legion For Peace,' But Jingoes Wives Attack Pacificism", 1927 September 23 | |||
"Disillusions and Dollars", 1927 November 5 | |||
"Short Stories in a Novel", 1927 November 11 | |||
"Minor Music", 1928 January 2 | |||
"'Defeat and Darkness' Juggler's Kiss", 1928 January 24 | |||
"Dunn's Company Unions Analyzed", 1928 February 25 | |||
Letter to the Editor Willimantic Chronicle re U.S. Senator Hiram Bingham, 1932 October 26 | |||
box 3 | folder 103 | ||
"Stories, Poems in "Anvil" Reflect Workers' Struggles"(Review of The Anvil in The Daily Worker by Isidor Schneider), 1934 | |||
box 3 | folder 104 | ||
The Home News, 1934-1937 | |||
box 3 | folder 105 | ||
Brain Sweat, 1934 April 6 | |||
"Bronx Photographer Records Dominant Spirit of Dynamic Mussolini in 45-Minute Audience", 1935 October 6 | |||
The Case of Philip Lawrence, 1937 June 9 | |||
"'Gus' Smith, Veteran of Stage and Screen Presides Over Harlem's Famed WPA Actors", 1937 June 20 | |||
Theatre Notes and Riding on Air, 1937 June 28 | |||
"Harlem Actors Fear WPA Retrenchment May Mean End of Federal Negro Theatre", 1937 July 4 | |||
"Anita Bush's Campaign for Colored Theatre Recalled by Featured Role in WPA Musical", 1937 August 22 | |||
The Home News, 1937-1938 | |||
box 3 | folder 106 | ||
Horse Play, 1937 August 28 | |||
"Theatre Notes", 1937 August 30 | |||
Moon of the Caribees, 1937 October 30 | |||
Mississippi Rainbow, 1938 March 5 | |||
The Home News, 1939-1940 | |||
box 3 | folder 107 | ||
Wuthering Heights, 1939 April 15 | |||
Wuthering Heights, 1939 April 28 | |||
Morning Star, 1940 April 17 | |||
Heavenly Express, 1940 April 19 | |||
There Shall Be No Night, 1940 April 30 | |||
Sunday Workers Progressive Weekly, 1939 | |||
box 3 | folder 108 | ||
"Cuba Drafts Her Bill of Rights", 1939 September 17 | |||
"From the Rich Red Soil of Cube", 1939 September 30 | |||
"The Man of September Fourth", 1939 October 1 | |||
The Home News, 1940-1942 | |||
box 3 | folder 109 | ||
Journey to Jerusalem, 1940 October 7 | |||
Arsenic and Old Lace, 1941 January 11 | |||
Sea Wolf, 1941 March 22 | |||
Maltese Falcon, 1941 October 4 | |||
Banjo Eyes, 1941 December 26 | |||
Louisiana Purchase, 1942 January 2 | |||
The Rivals, 1942 January 15 | |||
Hedda Gabler, 1942 January 30 | |||
The Home News, 1942 | |||
box 3 | folder 110 | ||
The Moon is Down, 1942 April 8 | |||
Remember Pearl Harbor, 1942 June 4 | |||
Laugh, Town, Laugh, 1942 June 23 | |||
Are Husbands Necessary, 1942 July 9 | |||
Spy Ship, 1942 July 13 | |||
Brooklyn U.S.A., 1942 July 15 | |||
The Merry Widow, 1942 July 16 | |||
Priorities on Parade, 1942 July 23 | |||
Crossroads, 1942 July 24 | |||
The Glass Key, 1942 September 15 | |||
The Skin of Our Teeth, 1942 November 19 | |||
The Great Big Doorstep, 1942 Novebmer 27 | |||
Random Harvest, 1942 December 18 | |||
The Three Sisters, 1942 December 19 | |||
Tennessee Johnson (film review), Christian Science Monitor, 1943 January 13 | |||
box 3 | folder 111 | ||
The Home News, 1943-1944 | |||
box 3 | folder 112 | ||
"War Grimness Stressed by Bronx Flier Who Has Seen Friends 'Go Up in Flames'", 1943 October 8 | |||
"Major H.L. Schwamm, World War Veteran, Is Elected President Of National Bronx Bank", 1944 March 31 | |||
The Home News, undated | |||
box 3 | folder 113 | ||
"'Oh Johnny' Need Not Pay 'Oh Honey' of Yesterday" | |||
"Waves Will Wear Winning Warm Weather Washables" | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1959-1965 | |||
box 3 | folder 114 | ||
"Time of Cuckoo Climaxes Uconn Summer Play Fete", 1959 August 5 | |||
"Gigi Proves Charming At New Studio Theatre", 1959 December 5 | |||
"Thousand Clowns Rings With Laughter at UConn", 1964 July 8 | |||
"Tunnel of Love Is Barrel of Laughs", 1964 August 5 | |||
"Vote Is Three To One For King of Hearts", 1964 August 12 | |||
"Merchant of Venice Again Colorful and Controversial", 1964 December 8 | |||
"Albatross Satirizes TV at Uconn's Playhouse", 1965 July 7 | |||
"'Black Irish Humor' Adds Bite to 'Hostage' Hijinks", 1965 August 15 | |||
"A Man for All Seasons Proves Exciting on UC Stage", 1965 October 26 | |||
"Cocktail Party Sparkles; Uconn Theatre at Its Best", 1965 December 4 | |||
Letter to the Editor Hartford Courant "The Infidels", 1962 July 9 | |||
box 3 | folder 115 | ||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1965-1966 | |||
box 3 | folder 116 | ||
"Sheridan's 1779 Burlesque Is Timely, Hilarious at UC", 1965 December 15 | |||
"Braggart Soldier Is Rowdy, Pagan, Modern", 1966 February 26 | |||
"Braggart Soldier Is Rowdy, Pagan, Modern", 1966 March 2 | |||
"Three Sisters Evokes 'Twilight Magic' at UC", 1966 April 18 | |||
"Uconn's The Physicists Is Nuclear Age Satire", 1966 May 4 | |||
"Moliere's Doctor Is Amusing Spoof at UC", 1966 May 14 | |||
"UC's Carnival Called Gala Musical and Circus", 1966 May 18 | |||
"Virginia Woolf Is Exciting and Savage at UC Nutmeg", 1966 June 29 | |||
"Tender Trap Is Laugh Riot at UC's Nutmeg Playhouse", 1966 July 6 | |||
"U.S.A. Evokes Nostalgia At UC's Nutmeg Playhouse", 1966 July 13 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1966-1967 | |||
box 3 | folder 117 | ||
"Time of Your Life Lives (Almost) Up to Title at UC", 1966 July 20 | |||
"Early Bernard Shaw is Delight at UConn's Nutmeg", 1966 July 27 | |||
"Look Back in Anger Still Reaches for Stars at UConn", 1966 August 2 | |||
"Kaufman-Hart Farce Still Prescription for Laughter", 1966 August 10 | |||
"Sea Tragedy of Billy Budd Unforgettable on UC Stage", 1966 October 24 | |||
"UConn Player's Romp in 1908 French Farce", 1966 November 14 | |||
"Tigerish 'Women' Delight UConn Theatre Audiences", 1966 December 5 | |||
"UC's Dr. Carlson Analyzes Poe's Belated Recognition", 1966 December 14 | |||
"Ugo Betti's Corrupt Judges Get Dramatic Justice at UC", 1967 January 13 | |||
"Scrap of Paper Is Comic 'Sardoudledom'", 1967 February 27 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1967 | |||
box 3 | folder 118 | ||
"UC Graduate Director Offers Vivid Becket", 1967 March 1 | |||
"Wuthering Heights Both Gothic and Epic", 1967 April 3 | |||
"Once Upon a Mattress Is for Vaudeville Fans", 1967 April 26 | |||
"Taming of Shrew Is Mischievous and Gay", 1967 May 15 | |||
"Two Licensed Pilots Join CAP Squadron", 1967 June 20 | |||
"Stop the World Proves Delight at UC Nutmeg", 1967 June 28 | |||
"Luv Skirts Thin Ice; Proves UC Laugh-Riot", 1967 July 9 | |||
"Arsenic and Old Lace Still Hits Hilarious Pace", 1967 July 12 | |||
"Rhinoceros Is Off-Beat But Theatrically Exciting", 1967 July 19 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1967-1968 | |||
box 4 | folder 119 | ||
"Charley's Aunt Is Still Laugh Riot at UConn", 1967 August 2 | |||
"Marat-de Sade Is Shocker And Intellectual Challenge", 1967 August 9 | |||
"Nutmeg Theatre Attendance Soars 24% Over Last Year", 1967 August 14 | |||
"Nutmeg Audiences Called Conscious of Fashion, Hits", 1967 August 15 | |||
Letter complimenting Snow on previous two articles from University of Connecticut, 1967 August 22 | |||
"Imperial Production of Camus' Caligula Is Offered at UConn", 1967 October 23 | |||
"The Knack on UConn Stage, Proves Funnier Than Movie", 1967 November 13 | |||
"Lady Windermere's Fan Is Witty, Colorful (Mostly)", 1967 December 4 | |||
"UC's Dr. Carlson Presents Enigmatic Poe's Treasures", 1968 January 10 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1968 | |||
box 4 | folder 120 | ||
"Gennesaret Is Tragedy Of Crime and Revenge", 1968 March 11 | |||
"Brecht's Mother Courage Is Exciting Anti-War Epic", 1968 March 25 | |||
"Life-size Puppets, Dragon Create Colorful UC Mikado", 1968 April 22 | |||
"UC Dramatist to Have New Play Offered in Storrs", 1968 April 29 | |||
"Carnival Atmosphere Reigns as Total Theatre Arrives", 1968 May 6 | |||
"Three 'Existentialist Plays,' Four Comedies Set at UConn", 1968 May 18 | |||
"Albee's Tiny Alice Is Expertly-Played Riddle, 1968 June 27 | |||
"Hot Summer Explosion Is Averted by Parley Here", 1968 July 2 | |||
"State Drama Critics To Attend O'Neill Parley", 1968 July 6 | |||
"Pirandello's Masterpiece Is Electrifying at Nutmeg", 1968 July 10 | |||
"Playwrights, Critics Open O'Neill Conference Sunday", 1968 July 13 | |||
"O'Neill Memorial Foundation Offers Ghetto Tragedy by New Black Playwright," & "Barefoot in the Park Proves Funnier on Stage Than as Film", 1968 July 18 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1968 | |||
box 4 | folder 121 | ||
"The Balcony Due at UConn; Genet's Satirical Fantasy", 1968 July 20 | |||
"O'Neill Foundation Offers 1-Act Comedy and Drama", 1968 July 22 | |||
"Sail Along Sound Inspires Idea Of O'Neill Memorial", 1968 July 23 | |||
"Nutmeg's Balcony is Daring, Spectacular", 1968 July 24 | |||
"2 O'Neil Playwrights Try New Techniques", 1968 July 29 | |||
"Fjelde Translates Ibsen, Attends O'Neill Parley", 1968 July 30 | |||
"Male Animal Is Campus Treat and Laugh-Riot", 1968 July 31 | |||
"Androcles and Lion to Close Nutmeg Season Next Week'", 1968 August 2 | |||
"'Private Ear,' 'Public Eye' Are Funny, Human, Wise", 1968 August 4 | |||
"Summertree Playwright Scores Again", 1968 August 5 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1968 | |||
box 4 | folder 122 | ||
"Androcles Combines Farce, Comedy, Pageant", 1968 August 7 | |||
"Hilarious Show Has UC Box office Troubles", 1968 August 12 | |||
"Should It Aviod Drama, Stick to Comedy", 1968 August 14 | |||
"Do You Want to Read a Good Story? 60 Best Novels Are Selected", 1968 September 5 | |||
"London Bobbies Keep Queen's Peace' Without Guns", 1968 October 9 | |||
"London Streets, Ancient Names, Invoke Magic; 'Still Fairest City in World'", 1968 October 10 | |||
"London Offers 35 Plays to Broadway's 15", 1968 October 15 | |||
"High Broadway Costs Will Bar Importation of Some London Hits", 1968 October 16 | |||
"Luftwaffe Blasted Third of Canterbury, Barely Missed Gothic Cathedral", 1968 October 23 | |||
"Nightingales Leave Hampstead, Keats' Music Lingers", 1968 October 28 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1968-1969 | |||
box 4 | folder 123 | ||
"Homecoming Gets Mixed Reaction", 1968 October 28 | |||
"Dr. Johnson's 'Dictionary House' Is Restored After Three Bombings", 1968 November 11 | |||
"Othello Is Cool Hepcat in Uneven Uconn Revival", 1968 November 18 | |||
"Haunted and Haunting Poe Offered in UC Monologue", 1968 December 5 | |||
"House of Bernard Alba Offered at UC Theatre", 1968 December 10 | |||
"Confrontation '69 Jibes Gently at Rebels, Brass", 1969 February 22 | |||
"Caldwell Remains Giant; Stories Stand Test of Time", 1969 March 1 | |||
"Rice's Adding Machine Proves Exciting, Timely", 1969 March 17 | |||
"Vet's Homecoming Is Haunting UC Drama", 1969 March 26 | |||
"Jack Conroy, Bontemps to Talk at UConn", 1969 April 4 | |||
"Senior Follies Scores; Shafer Audience Roars", 1969 April 12 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1969 | |||
box 4 | folder 124 | ||
"Summertree at UConn Is Beautiful and Haunting", 1969 April 14 | |||
"Forgotten Novel Hailed as Classic, Jack Conroy is at UConn for 2.5 Days", 1969 April 15 | |||
"5 Northward Migrations Is Topic at UConn's Friday", 1969 April 16 | |||
"UC's Imaginative Directions Enhances 3 One-Acters", 1969 April 21 | |||
"Quality Paperbacks Designed for Students", 1969 April 22 | |||
"Mary Lavin's Irish Romance is Revealed", 1969 April 23 | |||
"New York is Fabulous City in Springtime as Sea Breeze Banishes Smog", 1969 April 29 | |||
"McWilliams, Cowley Speak at UC Tribute", 1969 April 30 | |||
"Threepenny Opera Scores As UConn Theatre Finale", 1969 May 2 | |||
"Grapes of Wrath Hailed By Cowley as 'U.S. Epic'", 1969 May 3 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1969 | |||
box 4 | folder 125 | ||
"B. Tavern's Cotton-Pickers Is Autobiographical Novel", 1969 May 14 | |||
"If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium!, Why Not 3 Full Weeks in Britain?", 1969 May 27 | |||
"Prices Lower In England But Trip Isn't Cheap", 1969 May 28 | |||
"Odd Couple Still Proves Laugh-Riot at UConn's Nutmeg Playhouse", 1969 June 25 | |||
"UConn's 'Semester of Thirties' Highlighted B. Traven, Neglected Novelist", 1969 June 30 | |||
"Brian Friel's Lovers Is Darlin' Evening at UC", 1969 July 2 | |||
"Nutmeg Players Brilliantly Recreate 12th Century Palace Crisis", 1969 July 10 | |||
"Eugene O'Neill Troupe Offering 17 New Plays in Month", 1969 July 14 | |||
"Nutmeg Clowns Are Riots in Funniest of French Farces at UConn", 1969 July 16 | |||
"Director of Marat-Sade Will Stage Loot at UConn", 1969 July 19 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1969 | |||
box 4 | folder 126 | ||
"Uproarious Comedy at Wake? Loot Offers Macabre Mirth at UC Nutmeg", 1969 July 22 | |||
"Summer's Biggest Audience Hails Albee's Sardonic Comedy at Nutmeg", 1969 July 30 | |||
"Mansfield's Wormwood Review is Moving to California After 9 Years", 1969 August 4 | |||
"Jean Brodie Is in Her Prime; Wins Nutmeg Applause, Cheers", 1969 August 6 | |||
"Woman Skyjacker Used Name of Dead Guerrilla", 1969 September 2 | |||
"Chronicle Writer Finds Abbotsford Is Monument to Dreams, Folly", 1969 October 18 | |||
"Royal Hunt of the Sun Is Colorful But Uneven UConn Spectacle", 1969 October 27 | |||
"Chronicle Writer Rediscovers Scott and Tours 'Lady of Lake' Country", 1969 November 10 | |||
"Rimers of Eldritch Proves Grim Drama of Ghost Town", 1969 November 17 | |||
"Ruines of Border Abbeys Intrigued Walter Scott and Still Haunt Tourists", 1969 December 1 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1969-1970 | |||
box 4 | folder 127 | ||
"Edinburgh Tour Reveals Old Scandals, Scenic Delights", 1969 December 8 | |||
"UC Offers Haunting Version of O'Neill's Long Day's Journey Into Night, 1969 December 9 | |||
"New Scotland Yard's 'Black Museum' Recalls Grim Murders, Clever Spies", 1969 December 15 | |||
"Police Doctors Can Blunder, Touring Writer Learns", 1969 December 16 | |||
"Chronicle Writer, Visiting Stratford-Upon-Avon, Finds Magic Tops Over-Commercialization", 1970 January 15 | |||
"Chronicle Writer Tours Estates of Shakespeare, Landowner and Poet", 1970 January 16 | |||
"Chronicle Writer Visits Great Garden, Recalls Poet's Love of Flowers", 1970 January 20 | |||
"Queen and Rebels' Offered at Arena Theatre", 1970 February 23 | |||
"Lysistata, 2,400 Years Old, Proves Rowdy, Timely Antiwar Satire at UC", 1970 March 9 | |||
"Wormwood Review, Long Published in Storrs, Thrives in California", 1970 March 18 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1970 | |||
box 4 | folder 128 | ||
"Poet Wordsworth's Bi-Centenary Opens", 1970 April 3 | |||
"How Doctor and Barber Became Associated in Fantasticks Show", 1970 April 4 | |||
"Dickens's London Is Spotlighted on 100th Anniversary", 1970 April 6 | |||
"Dickens's House Is Preserved in London", 1970 April 7 | |||
"Trouble With Lawyers Bares Banditry at Bar", 1970 April 9 | |||
"Roar of Greasepaint Is Tuneful, Lively But--", 1970 April 13 | |||
"Love for Three Oranges Best of UC Puppet Shows", 1970 May 4 | |||
"Star-Spangled Girl Sparkles at UConn", 1970 June 24 | |||
"'Blackout Comedy' Should be Title of UC's Hilarious Farce", 1970 July 1 | |||
"Noel Coward's Comedies Of Twenties Score Again", 1970 July 6 | |||
"Hay Fever Is Still Madcap Frolic at UC", 1970 July 8 | |||
"Title Role of Bernard Shaw's Candida Goal of Actresses Now; Once Was Shunned", 1970 July 11 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1970 | |||
box 4 | folder 129 | ||
"Shaw's Candida Is Still Delightful and Timely at UConn's Nutmeg", 1970 July 15 | |||
"Feiffer's Little Murders Is Hilarious Nightmare", 1970 July 22 | |||
"Dietz Proves Fabulous Clown in Moliere's Miser at UC", 1970 July 29 | |||
"Bernard Shaw's Devil's Disciple in Top Form", 1970 August 3 | |||
"Romantic Ghosts of Past Haunt Camino Real at UC", 1970 August 5 | |||
"All's Well Evokes Curious Modern Moods With Story of Lady Doctor and Rebellious Youth", 1970 August 24 | |||
"Shakespeare Theatre Seeks Votes on Next Year's 3 Plays", 1970 August 25 | |||
"Coventry House Shook; Trees Bent Double As Baby Tornado Hit", 1970 August 31 | |||
"It Can Carry More Than Horses and Surreys Now: Gurleyville Bridge Joins Modern Era", 1970 September 8 | |||
"Does Wall Street Face New Bearish Trend or Will the Bulls Return?", 1970 November 16 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1970-1971 | |||
box 4 | folder 130 | ||
"Pinter's Birthday Party Mixes Laughs, Terror at UC", 1970 November 16 | |||
"Roller-Coaster Story of Writer's Life", 1970 November 28 | |||
"Dracula Hailed at UC as Scary 'Camp'", 1970 December 7 | |||
"That's right, we interviewed Mr. Groundhog", 1971 February 2 | |||
"British drama at UConn seems My Lai aftermath", 1971 February 15 | |||
"Bookseller-poet Briggs starred posthumously in 'little mag'", 1971 February 24 | |||
"Saved, British shocker, at UC", 1971 March 1 | |||
"Voice that is great within us' is great but flawed anthology", 1971 March 6 | |||
"Hogan's Goat, at UC playhouse, is poetic tragedy of Irish politics", 1971 March 22 | |||
"Eastern's poet-professor maps two projects in Denmark", 1971 April 24 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1971 | |||
box 4 | folder 131 | ||
"Poetic renaissance in area? 12 bards are getting in print", 1971 May 8 | |||
"Luck favors Chronicle reporter; misses Mediterranean disasters, strikes", 1971 June 30 | |||
"Man of La Mancha again wins ovation at UC's Nutmeg summer theatre", 1971 June 30 | |||
"Chronicle report on 23rd hour plan to aid periled wonder-city of Venice", 1971 July 3 | |||
"Chronicle reporter visits 16 Mediterranean ports of old Roman Empire", 1971 July 7 | |||
"Owl, Pussycat wins laughs…laughter at UC's Nutmeg", 1971 July 7 | |||
"Old Dubrovnik is best preserved fortified medieval port", 1971 July 14 | |||
"Cactus Flower is Nutmeg frolic", 1971 July 14 | |||
"'Pleasure Dome' of Diocletian", 1971 July 21 | |||
"Last Sweet Days of Isaac surprise and delight at UC", 1971 July 21 | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, 1971 | |||
box 4 | folder 132 | ||
"Imagination need to visualize ancient Olympia", 1971 July 28 | |||
"Ruined Parthenon's glory", 1971 August 4 | |||
"Adaptation and Next are Nutmeg double bill", 1971 August 4 | |||
"What happened to Troy's treasure in World War II?", 1971 August 11 | |||
"Lovely War scores at UConn", 1971 August 11 | |||
"Istanbul skyline: 1,000 minarets", 1971 August 18 | |||
"Mosques of Turkish conquerors contrasted with Topkapi harem scandals", 1971 August 25 | |||
"Ephesus ruins evoke city", 1971 September 1 | |||
"Carlson shows Poe's tale still provokes controversy", 1971 October 16 | |||
"Coventry Bookstore auctions inventory today", 1971 October 16 | |||
Letters to the Editor, 1971-1973 | |||
box 4 | folder 133 | ||
"Rockefeller" | |||
"Israeli Bombings" | |||
"Steele on the spot" | |||
"No 'Hairy' Ape" | |||
"Untitled" | |||
"Horrified" | |||
"The big lie" | |||
"Praise for Page 8" | |||
"Boiler room tactics" | |||
Willimantic Chronicle, undated | |||
box 4 | folder 134 | ||
"Vintage Cops of Air Magazine" | |||
Series IV: Fictional Works, undated, 1928-1973 | |||
Title/Description | Instances | ||
Subseries A: Novels, undated, 1933-1969 | |||
"Bank Run in Harlem's 'Little Italy'" excerpt from novel The Magnificent Marchetti, published in International Literature, 1933 | |||
box 4 | folder 135 | ||
"Lunch Hour in Wall Street" excerpt from novel The Magnificent Marchetti published in The Anvil (Jack Conroy), 1933 | |||
box 4 | folder 136 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti early draft with corrections, pages 1-113, 1933 | |||
box 4 | folder 137 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti early draft with corrections, pages 114 -237A, 1933 | |||
box 4 | folder 138 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti early draft with corrections, pages 237B-250C, 1933 | |||
box 4 | folder 139 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti early draft with corrections, pages 251-367A, 1933 | |||
box 5 | folder 140 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti, early draft with corrections, pages pages 368-468, 1933 | |||
box 5 | folder 141 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti manuscript, pages 1-133, 1933 | |||
box 5 | folder 142 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti manuscript, pages 134-240, 1933 | |||
box 5 | folder 143 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti manuscript, pages 241-330, 1933 | |||
box 5 | folder 144 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti manuscript, pages 331-440, 1933 | |||
box 5 | folder 145 | ||
The Magnificent Marchetti manuscript, pages 441-603, 1933 | |||
box 5 | folder 146 | ||
Notes on Southern New England Textile Mills for Against Destiny (early version of Silent Weave the Mills), circa 1934 | |||
box 5 | folder 147 | ||
Against Destiny (early version of Silent Weave the Mills), circa 1934 | |||
box 5 | folder 148 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys manuscript with corrections, pages 1-82, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 149 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys manuscript with corrections, pages 83-163, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 150 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys manuscript with corrections, pages 164-279, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 151 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys carbon copy sent to publisher, pages 1-61, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 152 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys carbon copy sent to publisher, pages 62-105, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 153 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys carbon copy sent to publisher, pages 106-138, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 154 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys carbon copy sent to publisher, pages 139-177, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 155 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys carbon copy sent to publisher, pages 178-235, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 156 | ||
Silent Weave the Mills: A Novel of New England's Textile Valleys carbon copy sent to publisher, pages 237-279, circa 1941 | |||
box 6 | folder 157 | ||
The Dazzled and the Damned outline and several revisions of three chapters, 1951 | |||
box 6 | folder 158 | ||
The Dazzled and the Damned third version with annotations, pages 1-27, 1951 | |||
box 6 | folder 159 | ||
The Dazzled and the Damned third version with annotations, pages 28-86, 1951 | |||
box 6 | folder 160 | ||
The Dazzled and the Damned third version with annotations, pages 87-144, 1951 | |||
box 6 | folder 161 | ||
The Gaugin Murders fourth version of revised typescript with annotations, pages 1-73, 1969 | |||
box 6 | folder 162 | ||
The Gaugin Murders fourth version of revised typescript with annotations, pages 74-131, 1969 | |||
box 6 | folder 163 | ||
The Gaugin Murders fourth version of revised typescript with annotations, pages 132-198, 1969 | |||
box 6 | folder 164 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 407-441, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 165 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 442-490, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 166 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 491-535, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 167 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 536-560, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 168 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 561-588, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 169 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 590-615, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 170 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 616-651, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 171 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 652-686, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 172 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 687-716, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 173 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 717-742, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 174 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 743-763, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 175 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 766-781, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 176 | ||
The Private Life of George Gissing manuscript, pages 782-794, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 177 | ||
The Liberators: a Novel of the Negro-Abolitionist Struggles for Freedom in the Civil War incomplete manuscript, pages 1-33, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 178 | ||
The Liberators: a Novel of the Negro-Abolitionist Struggles for Freedom in the Civil War incomplete manuscript, pages 34-65, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 179 | ||
The Liberators: a Novel of the Negro-Abolitionist Struggles for Freedom in the Civil War incomplete manuscript, pages 66-105, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 180 | ||
The Liberators: a Novel of the Negro-Abolitionist Struggles for Freedom in the Civil War incomplete manuscript, pages 106-145, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 181 | ||
The Liberators: a Novel of the Negro-Abolitionist Struggles for Freedom in the Civil War incomplete manuscript, pages 146-174, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 182 | ||
The Liberators: a Novel of the Negro-Abolitionist Struggles for Freedom in the Civil War outline, undated | |||
box 7 | folder 183 | ||
Subseries B: Plays, 1941, 1968 | |||
"Our Way of Life" one-act parody, 1941 | |||
box 7 | folder 184 | ||
"Law and Order Forever" one-act play, 1968 | |||
box 7 | folder 184 | ||
Subseries C: Poetry, undated, 1927-1972 | |||
Early Poems, undated, 1927-1944 | |||
box 8 | folder 186 | ||
"Goliath", 1930 | |||
"Social Worker", published in the Rebel Poet, 1931 | |||
"The New Statistics", 1931 | |||
"Rejections", 1941 | |||
"General W. T. Sherman: The Destroyer", circa 1942 | |||
"Priapus", 1944 | |||
"Faneuil Hall, Boston", undated | |||
"12:20 A.M. August 23, 1927", published in The Daily Worker, 1927 August 27 | |||
"Columbine, Colorado", published in The Daily Worker, 1927 November 26 | |||
Nine Poems, circa 1931 | |||
box 8 | folder 187 | ||
"Goliath" | |||
"The Duped" | |||
"Sons of Earth" | |||
"The Revolutionary Poet" | |||
"A Textile Worker's Prayer" | |||
"Flophouse Nocturne" | |||
"To Shelley" | |||
"The South Sea Romanticist" | |||
"To Jack Conroy, On His Story, 'Pipe Line'" | |||
Unrest, ed. Jack Conroy and Ralph Cheney, "A Striker Speaks", 1931 | |||
box 8 | folder 188 | ||
"A Dirge for England", 1937 | |||
box 8 | folder 189 | ||
"Sonnets to Theodosia", 1940 | |||
box 8 | folder 190 | ||
"Encounter" | |||
"Reflection" | |||
"The Modern Venus" | |||
"Doubting Thomas" | |||
"The Lost Sonnet" | |||
"Of Patience" | |||
"Earthy Poetry" | |||
"Five Portraits of Liberators" published in The Negro Quarterly, 1942 | |||
"John Brown: The Avenger" | |||
"Frederick Douglas: Voice of His People" | |||
"Thaddeus Stevens: The Slandered" | |||
"Robert B. Elliott: Tribune in Congress" | |||
"Senator Charles Sumner: Enlightened Hatred" | |||
Sonnets published in Wormwood Review, 1970 | |||
box 8 | folder 191 | ||
"New York" | |||
"The Muse of Youth" | |||
"The Villa in Hampstead" | |||
Drafts and revisions of "Bound in Shallows (Ben Johnson Recalls an Obscure Play Right)", 1970-1971 | |||
box 8 | folder 192 | ||
"Bound in Shallows (Ben Johnson Recalls an Obscure Play Right)" with annotations and correspondence from Marvin Malone, 1970-1971 | |||
box 8 | folder 193 | ||
Correspondence of reaction to "Bound in Shallows (Ben Johnson Recalls an Obscure Play Right)", undated | |||
box 8 | folder 194 | ||
Published version of "Robert Browning at Sunset and Midday" in Wormwood Review with drafts and revisions, 1971 | |||
box 8 | folder 195 | ||
Correspondence of reaction to "Robert Browning at Sunset and Midday", circa 1971 | |||
box 8 | folder 196 | ||
Program for solo poetry reading with accompanying commentary and correspondence, 1971 January 31 | |||
box 8 | folder 197 | ||
"The 'Nigger' He Killed" | |||
"September 13, 1971" | |||
Program for solo poetry reading with accompanying commentary and correspondence, 1971 October 17 | |||
box 8 | folder 198 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, drafts and notes on title poem, 1971-1972 | |||
box 8 | folder 199 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, drafts and notes on title poem, 1971-1972 | |||
box 8 | folder 200 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, drafts and notes on title poem, 1971-1972 | |||
box 8 | folder 201 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, drafts and notes on title poem, 1971-1972 | |||
box 8 | folder 202 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, drafts and notes on title poem, 1971-1972 | |||
box 8 | folder 203 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, drafts and notes on title poem, 1971-1972 | |||
box 8 | folder 204 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, carbon copies of poems with annotations and notes, 1971-1972 | |||
box 8 | folder 205 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, carbon copies of poems with annotations and notes, 1971-1972 | |||
box 8 | folder 206 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, carbon copies of poems with annotations and notes, 1971-1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 207 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, carbon copies of poems with annotations and notes, 1971-1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 208 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, photocopy, 1971-1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 209 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, corrected copies, 1971-1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 210 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, corrected copies, 1971-1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 211 | ||
The Glory and the Shame, corrected copies, 1971-1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 212 | ||
Four poems possibly removed from The Glory and the Shame, circa 1971-1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 213 | ||
"Columbine, Colorado", 1927 | |||
"Priapus", written draft removed to Folder 186, 1944 | |||
"The Name Is Fascination", undated | |||
"A Roman Priest of 410 A.D.", undated | |||
Correspondence with Open Places (poetry magazine), 1971-1973 | |||
box 9 | folder 214 | ||
"The True Story of Madame Sosoctris", drafts and notes | |||
Open Places, copies of magazine with Snow's publication, 1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 215 | ||
"The True Story of Madame Sosoctris", 1972 January | |||
"The Nigger He Killed", 1972 May | |||
"Spain: The Modern Phoenix" & "Elegy on the Dead of the International Brigades", 1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 216 | ||
Monday Writer's Group (Chaplin, CT), "The Failure, Dead at 44" and poems by others, 1972 | |||
box 9 | folder 217 | ||
"South of Hue" published in The Daily World, 1972 November 3 | |||
box 9 | folder 218 | ||
Poems in Progress, 1941-1942, 1960, 1971 | |||
box 9 | folder 219 | ||
"Mohawks in a Foreign City", 1941 | |||
"President Hayes-The Betrayer of 1877", 1942 | |||
"Brief Homage to Diana", 1960 | |||
"The Finest Hour of the State Troopers", 1971 | |||
"Another Premier Meets Justice", 1971 | |||
Poems Written Post-Hospitalization, circa 1971 | |||
box 9 | folder 220 | ||
"Involuntary Retirement" | |||
"The Neglected Poet (from 1896 to 1916)" | |||
"Ex-Romeo" | |||
"Reflections in Rome's Protestant Cemetery" | |||
"To Governor Rockefeller" | |||
"Windham's Fourth Floor Nurses" | |||
Poems in Progress, 1972-1973 | |||
box 9 | folder 221 | ||
Untitled poems/notes | |||
"The Name is Fascination" | |||
"Cellini" | |||
"Those Ugly Words" | |||
"A Pequot's Lamentation (1638)" | |||
"The Failure, Dead at 44" | |||
"The Haunted President" | |||
"Dear Botticelli" | |||
"Elaine" | |||
"St. Helen Finds the True Cross" | |||
"Spring-Time and Laura" | |||
"Grandeur Remains" | |||
Series V: Short Fiction, undated, 1928-1933, 1941-1970 | |||
Title/Description | Instances | ||
Subseries A: New York City Short Ficition, undated, 1928 | |||
"Dumas is Dead, Long Live Dumas", 1928 | |||
box 9 | folder 222 | ||
"Aunt Rashe's Hoard" | |||
box 9 | folder 223 | ||
"Great Granny" | |||
box 9 | folder 224 | ||
"No Fingers" | |||
box 9 | folder 225 | ||
"Nocturne" | |||
box 9 | folder 226 | ||
"The Three Thanes" | |||
box 9 | folder 227 | ||
"You can't get Sentimental" | |||
box 9 | folder 228 | ||
Subseries B: Chaplin, CT Short Ficition, undated, 1930-1931 | |||
"On the Spot", 1930 | |||
box 9 | folder 229 | ||
"The Nemesis of Flash Dolan" (original version of "The Bumboat Blind"), 1930 | |||
box 9 | folder 230 | ||
"The Bumboat Blind", 1930 | |||
box 9 | folder 231 | ||
"Ticket to Hell", 1930 | |||
box 9 | folder 232 | ||
Notes on potential story "Bullets and Snails", 1930 | |||
box 9 | folder 233 | ||
"Bullets and Snails", 1930 | |||
box 9 | folder 234 | ||
"One--Way Ride", 1930 | |||
box 10 | folder 235 | ||
"The Greatest Northwood's Guide", 1931 | |||
box 10 | folder 236 | ||
"A Moll's Last Clean-up" | |||
box 10 | folder 237 | ||
"Adventures all Luck Amuck" | |||
box 10 | folder 238 | ||
"Chinese Death" | |||
box 10 | folder 239 | ||
Character outline for "Gambler's War" | |||
box 10 | folder 240 | ||
"Gambler's War" | |||
box 10 | folder 241 | ||
"Gambler's War" | |||
box 10 | folder 242 | ||
"Gold Star Reporter" | |||
box 10 | folder 243 | ||
"Kid Road Builder" | |||
box 10 | folder 244 | ||
"Pagoda Secret" | |||
box 10 | folder 245 | ||
"Star Witness" | |||
box 10 | folder 246 | ||
"The End of the Hunt" | |||
box 10 | folder 247 | ||
"The Jade of Mei Quong" | |||
box 10 | folder 248 | ||
"The Real McCoy" | |||
box 10 | folder 249 | ||
Subseries C: Willimantic, CT Short Ficition, undated, 1931-1932 | |||
"Blackmailer", 1931 | |||
box 10 | folder 250 | ||
Notes on potential story "The Goetz Kill: Candidate for the Hot Squat", 1931 | |||
box 10 | folder 251 | ||
"The Goetz Kill: Candidate for the Hot Squat", 1931 | |||
box 10 | folder 252 | ||
"The Heir of Boss Mahoney", 1931 | |||
box 10 | folder 253 | ||
Notes on potential story "The Third Killer", 1931 | |||
box 10 | folder 254 | ||
"A Note on 'The Third Killer' for The Story Tellers' Circle", 1931 | |||
box 10 | folder 255 | ||
"The Third Killer", 1931 | |||
box 10 | folder 256 | ||
"Headlines in Hell", 1932 | |||
box 10 | folder 257 | ||
"Burmese Revenge" | |||
box 11 | folder 258 | ||
"Daly's Reply" | |||
box 11 | folder 259 | ||
"Dragon's Charmer" | |||
box 11 | folder 260 | ||
"Hell's Murder Extra" | |||
box 11 | folder 261 | ||
"One Hour to Catch His Ship" | |||
box 11 | folder 262 | ||
"Racketeer's Justice" | |||
box 11 | folder 263 | ||
"Ryan's Reply" | |||
box 11 | folder 264 | ||
"Sicilian Banquet" | |||
box 11 | folder 265 | ||
"The Blizzard Killer" | |||
box 11 | folder 266 | ||
"The Devil's Age" | |||
box 11 | folder 267 | ||
"The Gloom-Chaser" | |||
box 11 | folder 268 | ||
"The Old Life" | |||
box 11 | folder 269 | ||
"The Phantom Terror" | |||
box 11 | folder 270 | ||
Notes on potential story "To be Called Suicide" | |||
box 11 | folder 271 | ||
"To be Called Suicide" | |||
box 11 | folder 272 | ||
Subseries D: Individual Works, 1941-1970 | |||
"Heat Wave", 1941 | |||
box 11 | folder 273 | ||
"Prospect Avenue", 1941 | |||
box 11 | folder 274 | ||
"The Former Lieutenant Governor", 1941 | |||
box 11 | folder 275 | ||
"Thunderbolt", 1941 | |||
box 11 | folder 276 | ||
"The Moving Finger", 1948 | |||
box 11 | folder 277 | ||
"A White Lily for Corpse", 1948-1949 | |||
box 11 | folder 278 | ||
"The Bleeding Hand", 1949 | |||
box 12 | folder 279 | ||
Correspondence about Mystery Story Writing (Mystery Writers of America, information about stories), circa 1949-1955 | |||
box 12 | folder 280 | ||
"What Would You Do?", 1951 | |||
box 12 | folder 281 | ||
"Whiplash", 1951 | |||
box 12 | folder 282 | ||
"Jacklighter", pages 1-94, 1952-1953 | |||
box 12 | folder 283 | ||
Annotated draft of "Jacklighter", 1952-1953 | |||
box 12 | folder 284 | ||
Annotated draft of "Jacklighter", 1952-1953 | |||
box 12 | folder 285 | ||
Annotated draft of "Jacklighter" with outline, 1952-1953 | |||
box 12 | folder 286 | ||
"Pushover", 1953 | |||
box 12 | folder 287 | ||
"Lonely Hearts", 1955 | |||
box 12 | folder 288 | ||
Drafts and notes for "My Stepson Tiger", 1955 | |||
box 12 | folder 289 | ||
Drafts and notes for "My Stepson Tiger", 1955 | |||
box 12 | folder 290 | ||
"Hitch", 1956 | |||
box 12 | folder 291 | ||
"I Killed a Kid Last Night", 1956 | |||
box 12 | folder 292 | ||
"I Wanted to be a Man for Her", 1956 | |||
box 12 | folder 293 | ||
"I, Too, Was Guilty", 1956 | |||
box 12 | folder 294 | ||
"Protector", 1956 | |||
box 13 | folder 295 | ||
"Trapped", 1956 | |||
box 13 | folder 296 | ||
"Unforgivable", 1956 | |||
box 13 | folder 297 | ||
"Visitor From Boston", 1956 | |||
box 13 | folder 298 | ||
"Cross Your Heart", 1956-1957 | |||
box 13 | folder 299 | ||
"Press Agent for Murder", 1958 | |||
box 13 | folder 300 | ||
"Nightmare Drive", 1960 | |||
box 13 | folder 301 | ||
"Darkling, I Listen", 1962 | |||
box 13 | folder 302 | ||
"The Dear, Little Thing", 1965-1966 | |||
box 13 | folder 303 | ||
"Another Circe", 1965-1967 | |||
box 13 | folder 304 | ||
"Release", 1966 | |||
box 13 | folder 305 | ||
"Ever See a Dream…Running" drafts (published in Topper magazine), 1966-1967 | |||
box 13 | folder 306 | ||
"Ever See a Dream…Running" drafts (published in Topper magazine), 1966-1967 | |||
box 13 | folder 307 | ||
"The New Neighbor", 1966-1967 | |||
box 13 | folder 308 | ||
"The One Night She Became Really Mellow", 1967 | |||
box 13 | folder 309 | ||
"Master of Education", 1968 | |||
box 13 | folder 310 | ||
"Said the Spider", 1970 | |||
box 13 | folder 311 | ||
Published versions of stories in pulp fiction magazines (clippings) | |||
box 13 | folder 312 | ||
"Gangster Suicide", published in Gang World, 1931 May | |||
"The Death Hunch", published in Short Stories, 1932 April 25 | |||
"Tickets to the Grave", published in Gang World, 1932 July | |||
"The Moving Finger", published in 10-Story Detective Magazine, 1948 December | |||
"No Stock in Graves", published in Dime Detective, 1950 January | |||
"Boozer Take All", published in Black Mask, 1950 March 14 | |||
Published stories in various pulp fiction magazines (clippings) | |||
box 14 | folder 313 | ||
"Sky Scraper Blonde", published in 15-Story Detective, 1950 June | |||
"Exclusive Sucker", published in Dime Detective, 1950 October | |||
"The Guilty Innocent", published in 15-Story Detective, 1951 May | |||
"Death -in the Bag", published in 15-Story Detective, 1950 April | |||
"Dead Men Don't Shriek", published in Suspect, 1956 February | |||
"The Late Mrs. Vogel", published in Suspect, 1956 August | |||
"The Blizzard Killer", published in Detective | |||
"White Lily of Doom", published in 10-Story Detective | |||
Subseries E: Individual Works, undated | |||
"A Hunch about Death" | |||
box 14 | folder 314 | ||
"Big News From Ireland" | |||
box 14 | folder 315 | ||
"Bowery Nocturne" | |||
box 14 | folder 316 | ||
"Death of the Assassin" | |||
box 14 | folder 317 | ||
"Hat Check Broad" | |||
box 14 | folder 318 | ||
"Long-Awaited Meeting" | |||
box 14 | folder 319 | ||
"Mr. Sheldon's Awakening" | |||
box 14 | folder 320 | ||
"Nice Guy Who Went Wrong" | |||
box 14 | folder 321 | ||
"Road Builder" | |||
box 14 | folder 322 | ||
"The Brief and Final Appearance of Mr. Hyde" | |||
box 14 | folder 323 | ||
"The Death Swindle" | |||
box 14 | folder 324 | ||
"The Husband Who Knew" | |||
box 14 | folder 325 | ||
"The Late Mrs. Vogel" | |||
box 14 | folder 326 | ||
"Theodosia--And Also Teddy" | |||
box 14 | folder 327 | ||
"They Can't Find Johnny" | |||
box 14 | folder 328 | ||
"Vengeance is the Lord's" | |||
box 14 | folder 329 | ||
Series V: Notes, undated, 1926-1972 | |||
Title/Description | Instances | ||
"Early Apprenticeship" (story notes prior to 1926) | |||
box 14 | folder 330 | ||
Analysis of thirteen issues of The Rebel Poet, circa 1932 | |||
box 14 | folder 331 | ||
Analysis of plays by Shaw, Odets, Chekhov, & O'Neill, circa 1934 | |||
box 14 | folder 332 | ||
Notes on Birth of a Nation, circa 1938 | |||
box 14 | folder 333 | ||
Notes for a novel Sisters, circa 1941-1945 | |||
box 14 | folder 334 | ||
Analysis of popular detective magazines, 1947 | |||
box 14 | folder 335 | ||
Notes and partial works, 1948-1952 | |||
box 14 | folder 336 | ||
"Introduction to Parables" lecture notes, 1958 | |||
box 14 | folder 337 | ||
Notes, circa 1959 | |||
box 14 | folder 338 | ||
Outline for story "The Man He Might Have Killed", 1960 | |||
box 14 | folder 339 | ||
Analysis of End of Night by John D. MacDonald, 1960 | |||
box 14 | folder 340 | ||
Notes and beginnings of Heretics and Tyrant Popes, 1962-1963 | |||
box 14 | folder 341 | ||
Beginning and outline of novel The Restless Years, 1963 | |||
box 14 | folder 342 | ||
Italian notes and review of Frank G. Slaughter's novel Constantine, 1965, 1969-1970 | |||
box 14 | folder 343 | ||
Notes for Willimantic Chronicle articles, 1967, 1970 | |||
box 14 | folder 344 | ||
Notes on O'Neil Plays, 1968 | |||
box 15 | folder 345 | ||
Notes on 1971 Coventry police scandal | |||
box 15 | folder 346 | ||
"Tri-towners" discussion group notes on novels discussed, 1971-1972 | |||
box 15 | folder 347 | ||
Analysis of the 1972 National Election | |||
box 15 | folder 348 | ||
Outline of American Voices, undated | |||
box 15 | folder 349 | ||
Analysis of stories, undated | |||
box 15 | folder 350 | ||
Notes on potential stories, undated | |||
box 15 | folder 351 | ||
Notes on potential novel Deep and Shallow Roots, undated | |||
box 15 | folder 352 | ||
Notes on potential novel Old Man Jesus, undated | |||
box 15 | folder 353 | ||
Analysis of Dashiel Hammett plots, undated | |||
box 15 | folder 354 | ||
Beginnings of stories, undated | |||
box 15 | folder 355 | ||
"All that Their Money Could Buy" | |||
"Seven Unemployed" | |||
Series VI: Ephemera, undated, circa 1930-1973 | |||
Title/Description | Instances | ||
Stories for The Anvil No. 10 (not written by Snow), 1933 | |||
box 15 | folder 356 | ||
Clipped reviews of Theatre Union plays (Negro Theatre), not written by Snow, 1934 | |||
box 15 | folder 357 | ||
Laurel Club Show script, 1961 | |||
box 15 | folder 358 | ||
Playbills and other print ephemera for plays, 1966-1971 | |||
box 15 | folder 359 | ||
Print ephemera related to 1968 O'Neill Theatre Foundation National Playwrights Conference | |||
box 15 | folder 360 | ||
Print ephemera related to Jack Conroy, 1971-1973 | |||
box 15 | folder 361 | ||
Clippings of poetry and book reviews, 1971-1972 | |||
box 15 | folder 362 | ||
Newspaper clippings, undated, circa 1930-1973 | |||
box 15 | folder 363 | ||
Series VII: Pulp Literature, 1931-1968 | |||
Title/Description | Instances | ||
10 Story Detective Magazine | |||
Vol. 16 No. 3,, 1948 December | |||
15 Story Detective | |||
Vol. 2 No. 4,, 1950 April | |||
Vol. 3 No. 1,, 1950 June | |||
1951 May | |||
Black Mask | |||
Vol. 34 No. 2,, 1950 March | |||
Blue Steel Magazine | |||
Vol. 1 No. 4,, 1932 June | |||
Complete Detective Novel Magazine | |||
No. 54,, 1932 December | |||
Detective Action Stories | |||
Vol. 3 No. 3,, 1931 August | |||
Vol. 5 No. 1,, 1932 February | |||
Vol. 5 No. 3,, 1932 April | |||
Dime Detective Magazine | |||
Vol. 62 No. 1,, 1950 January | |||
Vol. 64 No. 2,, 1950 October | |||
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine | |||
Vol. 19 No. 100,, 1952 March | |||
Excitement | |||
Vol. 22 No. 2,, 1931 April | |||
Far East Adventure Stories | |||
Vol. 4 No. 1,, 1932 February | |||
Gang World | |||
Vol. 2 No. 1,, 1931 February | |||
Vol. 2 No. 4,, 1931 May | |||
Vol. 3 No. 1,, 1931 June | |||
Vol. 3 No. 2,, 1931 July | |||
Vol. 3 No. 3,, 1931 August | |||
Vol. 3 No. 4,, 1931 September | |||
Vol. 4 No. 1,, 1931 October | |||
Vol. 4 No. 2,, 1931 November | |||
Vol. 4 No. 3,, 1931 December | |||
Vol. 5 No. 1,, 1932 February | |||
Vol. 5 No. 2,, 1932 March | |||
Vol. 5 No. 3,, 1932 April | |||
Vol. 5 No. 4,, 1932 May | |||
Vol. 5 No. 2,, 1932 July | |||
Vol. 6 No. 3,, 1932 September | |||
Vol. 6 No. 4,, 1932 October | |||
Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine | |||
Vol. 19 No. 4,, 1966 September | |||
Vol. 20 No. 2,, 1967 January | |||
Vol. 20 No. 4,, 1967 March | |||
Over the Top | |||
Vol. 3 No.5 ,, 1930 February | |||
Popular Magazine | |||
Vol. 103 No. 3,, 1931 July | |||
Rackateer Stories | |||
Vol. 4 No. 4,, 1931 September/October | |||
Rackateer and Gangland Stories | |||
Vol. 5/6 No. 1,, 1932 June | |||
Saint Detective Magazine | |||
Vol. 9 No. 2,, 1958 February | |||
Short Stories | |||
Vol. 134 No. 3,, 1931 February 10 | |||
Vol. 135 No. 2,, 1931 April 25 | |||
Vol. 138 No. 5,, 1932 March 10 | |||
Vol. 138 No. 6,, 1932 March 25 | |||
Vol. 139 No. 2,, 1932 April 25 | |||
Suspect Detective Stories | |||
Vol. 1 No. 1,, 1955 November | |||
Vol. 1 No. 2,, 1956 February | |||
Vol. 1 No. 3,, 1956 June | |||
Vol. 1 No. 4,, 1956 August | |||
Suspense Magazine | |||
Vol. 1 No. 2,, 1951 Summer | |||
Trapped | |||
Vol. 2 No. 2,, 1957 August | |||
Underworld Romances | |||
Vol. 1 No. 1,, 1931 November | |||
20 Great Tales of Murder, Helen McCloy and Brett Halliday, eds. London, England: Hammond, Hammond and Company, 1952. | |||
Crooks' Tour, Bruno Fischer, ed. New York, NY: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1953. | |||
Dangerous Dames, Make Shayne, ed. New York, NY: Dell Publishing Company, Inc., 1955. | |||
Golden Nightmare by Walter Snow. New York, NY: Austin-Phelps, Inc., 1952. | |||
Murder in Mond: An Anthology of Mystery Stories, Lawrence Treat, ed. New York, NY: E.P. Dutton and Company, Inc., 1967. | |||
With Malice Toward All, Robert L. Fish, ed. New York, NY: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1968. | |||
You Killed Slizabeth and other prize winning stories from 20 Great Tales of Murder by Brett Halliday. New York, NY: Hillman Books, 1960. | |||