登入選單
返回Google圖書搜尋
註釋"A girl on his office floor, something stolen from his file, and an itch in his blood to possess the tender flesh of the blonde! It was a bad mixture. It was a brew that spelled crime, with Pat Cassell a lawyer, planning the crime carefully and an accomodating lovely promising him everything, including a million dollars. E. Hamilton Clay traces the crime of a tough-minded, hard-hitting man and a scheming, yielding blonde, from its beginning in a new kind of kiss to the startling climax, when Pat learns that 'Such tender flesh' is dangerous. Our next story is 'Shadow of terror', by Robert Dudgeon. It started as a whisper, and in no time it was a broadcast scandal, and then the fear started ... the terror that compelled Mackle to pay and pay, until even terror lost its grip and he planned the kind of death that no man should die ... for somebody else. Hitting guys who couldn't hit back wasn't Tommy Figg's idea of fun, but he had put himself on the payroll of Mark Devereaux, who only knew one way of getting answers. In 'Hit me hard, baby', Roy James gives you a story with a punch."--Page two of cover.