This one was a ok collection of stories. I've read a half dozen or so of the Hitchcock collections and this is a weaker one. Not bad just kind of bland overall though it does have its highlights. Talmage Powell's Lone Witness is about an accident that turned out differently then the main two characters thought at first. C.B Gilford's A Fair Warning To Mystery Writers is fun with a mystery writer moving in to a new apartment complex and everyone coming to him trying to be in his books, when a real murder happens he tries to help the cops by showing everybody had a motive. Richard Deming's Monster Brain is a solid tale about an investigator for an insurance company who, because of weird stats coming out of the computer, is sent to a small town in the middle of nowhere to investigate the payouts to five policy holders and discovers that there was reason for concern. Jack Webb's A Miracle is Arranged is another tale of investigating insurance fraud, this time someone is supposedly paralyzed and the investigator thinks he is faking but cant prove it, maybe a miracle will happen. Lastly we have Frank Sisk's The Flat Male, a very short tale that shows that maybe you shouldn't neglect your wife no matter how smart you think you are about it. So five out of fourteen isnt a good average. Again not saying the others were terrible (though some were quite bad) but these were the only onea I could really recommend. Out of the other of these collections Ive read, there might have of been a stinker or two but overall good.
So with all of that can't recommend but it's a time waster with a few gems hidden in it.