These 58 short stories of mystery and suspense (not terror—that is a misnomer) were first published in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine during the 1960s and 1970s, hand-picked by the great director himself according to the blurb. Most of these narratives are rock-solid entertainment; they engage your attention, give you plenty of “aha” moments, and even elicit the occasional spine-tingle of terror. My favorites include the schoolboy who will kill for good grades, the reporter who writes up obituaries before the people die, and the woman who visits an asylum where the patients play the doctors—having killed the real doctors. If you enjoy clever, hard-boiled tales of mystery and suspense, then you’ll enjoy these. B+