This suspense-filled collection gathers together some of today's best mystery writers--including John D. MacDonald, Rex Stout, Margery Allingham, Patricia Moyers, and Malcolm McClintock, and many others--to provide ho-ho-ho homicide, and merry murder to all mystery-lovers of good cheer. A unique holiday classic. Reissue.
Cynthia Manson is a literary agent, formerly Director of Marketing at Davis Publications, publishers of Ellery Queen and Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazines. She has also edited several anthologies.
This a steady collection of Christmas stories that meets the title requirement more than other such collections I've read.
The reader of noir books will particularly like this set. This is decidedly a dark turn on the holiday. Wouldn't expect less when John D. MacDonald is part of the authors. Lots of dead bodies and bloody turn of events...with Christmas cheer added in.
While I had some favorites, the overall impression of the collection was rushed. Sometimes it felt rushed to include the mystery or the Christmas themed element. Lots of murders when mystery can mean more than that too. Three standouts for me were a small town mystery, an epilogue for A Christmas Carol, and a elf driven detective story.
A decent collection that is quite manageable to read over the course of days or weeks leading to Christmas. I think the collected stories are more obscure and may not seem completely “typical” of the authors included even if featuring familiar characters. I don’t know that I will read them again. Not bad, just meh.
This was an okay collection. Not all of the stories fit the mystery vibes. While I enjoyed a couple of the stories for the most part, this just wasn't for me. If you are someone who likes both short stories and you enjoy reading mysteries, you might enjoy this more than I did. It was a nice collection to read as a countdown to Christmas every other day.
An anthology of short stories that mention Christmas-y stuff. Definitely NOT Hallmark stories! Mysteries, including "Santa" being killed. A couple of rewrites of Scrooge & Marley. Short stories aren't my favorite form, I prefer something longer I can really get into.
Some of the stories were very entertaining, but on the whole not a very rewarding read. It shouldn't have taken me so long to finish, proving it just don`t hold my interest.
I enjoyed the variety in these stories, with some more clever and some more noir, and a few new riffs on old classics like A Christmas Carol. Nice light reading for a hectic December.
This collection of 12 short stories is very much in the vein of Alfred Hitchcock with twists, turns and surprising endings. I enjoyed them as I always have like Alfred Hitchcock type plots, and I liked the fact that I could read each one of them in a single sitting.
Mystery for Christmas is a collection of 12 Christmas-themed short stories reprinted from the pages of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine and Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine. Some of the stories are good, and others are ho ho hum.