John Creasey (as Michael Halliday, Jeremy York, and Kyle Hunt) and Michael Fane and Dr Cellini
Created | Updated Jun 7, 2013
John Creasey: Ten Authors in One
| The First of Many
| Simple Facts
| The Toff
Gideon of the Yard (as JJ Marric)
| Department Z
| Dr Palfrey
Patrick Dawlish (as Gordon Ashe)
| As Jeremy York
| Inspector West
Michael Fane and Dr Cellini
| The Baron
Michael Halliday was the first of John Creasey's pseudonyms created by request. After the publication of the prize-winning Baron book, Cassels asked for 'a different kind of story', and Creasey was looking almost hungrily for new opportunities. So he wrote Three for Adventure, a tale of people caught up in a web of events in which they were utterly helpless - a departure from his usual style since he had no 'series' in mind. The book was an immediate success, and was serialised in the Daily Sketch, the Star Weekly (Canada), and many other newspapers in the Commonwealth.
Creasey found himself enjoying the freedom of writing without a series character about whom the story had to revolve, and decided to continue writing 'non-series' books under the Michael Halliday pseudonym. There was tremendous vigour and great good humour in the 'Hallidays'; so much so that even Maurice Richardson was stirred to call him 'an impossible bedfellow for depression'. These same characteristics remained with Halliday until 1952, and indeed beyond, when the author, using the same pseudonym, launched an experimental series, anticipating what his two sons (then 11 and 12) would be like in early manhood. He put these characters into a private enquiry agency, and called himself Michael Fane, their author father. The experiment lasted for four books but never fully satisfied Creasey. He began to change the Halliday atmosphere until the tension in these books - still about hapless victims of circumstance - became even greater.
Unable to use the name Halliday in the USA because of the highly successful 'native' Brett Halliday, Creasey used the pseudonym Jeremy York for the Halliday books in that country, although York was already acquiring a different style and mood in Britain. As he was writing two Hallidays a year, and his American York publishers (then Scribners) could publish only one a year, there came another split-personality and Kyle Hunt was born, published first by Simon & Schuster, then by Random House, Macmillan and World.
Even these did not quite satisfy the John Creasey, and as a consequence Halliday experimented yet again and in 1966 the character of Dr Emmanuel Cellini evolved. 'This,' said Creasey, 'is what Michael Halliday has been searching for.' In the United States especially, the character was immediately and remarkably successful.
Meanwhile, those earlier titles have tremendously exciting 'grip', and when they were re-issued by Lythway Press in England and first published in the United States by World, who call them 'vintage Creasey', generations of Halliday readers were able see the gradual evolution of an author spread over 30 years.
Original Title | First British Edition | First US edition |
---|---|---|
Three for Adventure | 1937 | - |
Four Find Danger | 1937 | - |
Two Meet Trouble | 1938 | - |
Heir to Murder | 1940 | - |
Murder Comes Home | 1940 | - |
Who Saw Him Die? | 1941 | - |
Murder by the Way | 1941 | - |
Foul Play Suspected*** | 1942 | - |
Who Died at the Grange? | 1942 | - |
Five to Kill | 1943 | - |
Murder at King's Kitchen | 1943 | - |
Who Said Murder? | 1944 | - |
Crime With Many Voices*** | 1945 | - |
No Crime More Cruel*** | 1945 | - |
Murder Makes Murder | 1946 | - |
Mystery Motive*** | 1947 | - |
First a Murder*** | 1947 | 1972 |
Lend a Hand to Murder | 1948 | - |
No End to Danger | 1948 | - |
Who Killed Rebecca? | 1949 | - |
The Dying Witnesses | 1949 | - |
Murder Weekend | 1950 | - |
Dine with Murder | 1950 | - |
Quarrel with Murder | 1951 | - |
Out of the Shadows | 1954 | 1971 |
Death Out of Darkness | 1954 | 1971 |
The Fane Brothers Series | ||
Take a Body | 1952 | 1972 |
Lame Dog Murder | 1955 | 1972 |
Murder in the Stars | 1953 | 1972 |
Man on the Run | 1953 | 1972 |
***These titles were revised and the character of Superintendent Folly was written in. British paperbacks and library reprints after 1970 are as by Jeremy York. All US editions are by John Creasey as Jeremy York.
Original Title | First British Edition | First US edition | US Title if Different |
---|---|---|---|
Cat and Mouse | 1955 | 1957 | Hilda Takes Heed |
Murder at End House | 1955 | - | - |
Runaway | 1957 | 1971 | - |
Death of a Stranger | 1957 | 1959 | Come Here and Die |
Murder Assured | 1958 | - | - |
Missing from Home | 1959 | 1960 | Missing |
Thicker than Water | 1959 | 1962 | - |
How Many to Kill | 1960 | 1961 | The Girl in the Leopard Skin Bag |
Go Ahead with Murder | 1960 | 1962 | Two for the Money |
The Man I Killed | 1961 | 1963 | - |
The Edge of Terror | 1961 | 1963 | - |
Hate to Kill | 1962 | - | - |
The Quiet Fear | 1963 | 1968 | - |
Guilt of Innocence | 1964 | - | - |
*** These titles were revised and the character of Superintendent Folly was written in. British paperbacks and library reprints after 1970 are as by Jeremy York. All US editions are by John Creasey as Jeremy York.
Original Title | First British Edition | First US edition |
---|---|---|
Cunning as a Fox | 1965 | 1965 |
Wicked as the Devil | 1966 | 1966 |
Sly as a Serpent | 1967 | 1967 |
Cruel as a Cat | 1968 | 1968 |
Too Good to be True | 1969 | 1969 |
A Period of Evil | 1970 | 1971 |
As Lonely as the Damned | 1971 | 1972 |
As Empty as Hate | 1972 | 1972 |
As Merry as Hell | 1973 | 1973 |
This Man Did I Kill? | 1974 | 1974 |
The Man Who Was Not Himself | 1975 | 1975 |
All published in USA as by Kyle Hunt.