John R. Coryell
John Russell Coryell (1848–1924) was a prolific dime novel author. He wrote under the Nicolas Carter and Bertha M. Clay house pseudonyms, and, like many of his fellow dime novelists under many other pseudonyms, including Tyman Currio, Lillian R. Drayton, Julia Edwards, Geraldine Fleming, Margaret Grant, Barbara Howard, Harry Dubois Milman, Milton Quarterly and Lucy May Russell.[1]
Bibliography
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- Strasbourg Rose serialized in four parts, 1919
Scientific American
- "The Chinese Junk". Scientific American 4 (8). 25 August 1883.
- "The Termite Pest of the Old World". Scientific American 5 (10). 8 September 1888.
- "The Glyptodon". Scientific American 5 (15). 13 October 1888.
- "The Florida Manatee". Scientific American 5 (18). 3 November 1888.
- "The Great Tumble Weed of the Prairies". Scientific American 47 (23). 2 December 1882.
- "Gulling the Pelican". Scientific American 48 (22). 2 June 1883.
- "A Sheep Destroyer". Scientific American 51 (19). 8 November 1884.
- "The California Roadrunner". Scientific American 54 (4). 23 January 1886.
- "The Zarabatana of the Macoushies". Scientific American 55 (8). 21 August 1886.
See also
References
- ↑ Joseph F. Clarke (1977). Pseudonyms. BCA. p. 193.
Further reading
- Mystery and Suspense Writers: The Literature of Crime, Detection, and Espionage, Volume 1
- Ralph F. Cummings (1933). Dime novel authors, 1860-1900. R. F. Cummings.
External links
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