Thomas H. Cook
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas H. Cook (born 1947) is an American crime-writer, author of the Edgar Award winning novel The Chatham School Affair. He received six Edgar nominations to date, most recently in 2006 for the novel Red Leaves, which was also shortlisted for the CWA Duncan Lawrie Dagger and the Anthony Award, and went on to win the Barry Award and The Martin Beck Award.
[edit] Bibliography
- Blood Innocents (Playboy, 1980)
- The Orchids (Houghton Mifflin, 1982)
- Tabernacle (Houghton Mifflin, 1983)
- Elena (Houghton Mifflin, 1986)
- Sacrificial Ground (Putnam, 1988)
- Flesh and Blood (Putnam, 1989)
- Streets of Fire (Putnam, 1989)
- Night Secrets (Putnam, 1990)
- The City When It Rains (Putnam, 1991)
- Evidence of Blood (Putnam, 1991)
- Mortal Memory (Putnam, 1993)
- Breakheart Hill (Bantam, 1995)
- The Chatham School Affair (Bantam, 1996)
- Instruments of Night (Bantam, 1998)
- Places in the Dark (Bantam, 2000)
- Interrogation (Bantam, 2002)
- Taken (Dell, 2002)
- Moon Over Manhattan (New Millennium Press, 2002), with Larry King
- Peril (Bantam, 2004)
- Into the Web (Bantam, 2004)
- Red Leaves (Harcourt, 2005)
- The Murmur of Stones (Quercus, 2006) (published in the US as The Cloud of Unknowing)
- Master of the Delta (Harcourt, 2008)
- The Best American Crime Reporting 2008 (Harper Perennial, 2008) (with Jonathan Kellerman and Otto Penzler)

