
cover art by H.C. Murphy

cover art by Charles H. Alson
credited as being the first mystery published by a black American writer as well as the first mystery to have only black characters and feature the first black detective.
published in 1932 during the great Harlem Renaissance, Fisher was a man of many talents: physician, radiologist, orator, musician and writer. He died far too young, in 1934, after unsuccessful surgery.

better image (by a little) than previously posted
cover art by H.C. Murphy
~ Ray(mond) King, “T. McGuirk Lends a Helping Hand”, ‘13th of 14 McGuirk stories, billed as “the quaintest character in the Underworld” & honest, more of less’, 13th of 15 stories in BM
~ Joseph Gollomb, “The Man Who Stole a Palace”, ‘study of Parisian police methods’, 2nd of 6 articles
~ Glenn G. Gravatt, “The Million Dollar Robbery”, ‘The Manhunters; for this series, see chiefly under Charles Somerville,’ author’s only appearance in BM
~ Dashiell Hammett, “Corkscrew”, ‘The Op [12th of 22] in Arizona, billed as ‘A Western Detective Novelette’, reprinted in As Tough as They Come (Perma, 1951), 17th of 45 stories in BM
~ William La Varre, “The Golden Head”, ‘A Daytime Story’, author’s only appearance in BM
~ Ralph E. Mooney, “Outside the World”, ‘attempted murder of an editor’, author’s only appearance in BM
~ L. King Tichenor, “A Just Price”, ‘The Senator’ [no other explanation], 4th of 5 stories in BM
~ Henry S. Whitehead, “The Gladstone Bag”, 1st of 2 stories in BM
~ Valleau Wilkie, “The White Elephant”, ‘Billed as “A Last Minute Mystery”’, 2nd of 2 stories in BM
~ Jack Woodford, “Blank Fingers”, ‘article; fingerprints; cf. under John Nicholas Beffel’, May 1925 issue
©Seattle Mystery Bookshop