James Munro: Difference between revisions
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'''James Munro''' was the pseudonym of | '''James Munro''' was the pseudonym of British writer James William Mitchell (born 1926) who, in the late 1960s, wrote four superior spy thrillers under this byline. The hero is a British agent named [[John Craig]], who works, mostly reluctantly, for Department K. The books, ''The Man Who Sold Death''; ''Die Rich, Die Happy''; ''The Money That Money Can't Buy''; and ''The Innocent Bystanders'' were exceptionally tough-minded, well-written, and well-plotted. They had a genuinely heroic (and intelligent) protagonist, a brilliantly drawn eccentric M-type boss, and truly menacing villains. | ||
Mitchell also wrote under the pseudonym Patrick O. McGuire. | Mitchell also wrote under the pseudonym Patrick O. McGuire. | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*[[ | *[[Crime fiction/Catalogs]][[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 06:00, 4 September 2024
James Munro was the pseudonym of British writer James William Mitchell (born 1926) who, in the late 1960s, wrote four superior spy thrillers under this byline. The hero is a British agent named John Craig, who works, mostly reluctantly, for Department K. The books, The Man Who Sold Death; Die Rich, Die Happy; The Money That Money Can't Buy; and The Innocent Bystanders were exceptionally tough-minded, well-written, and well-plotted. They had a genuinely heroic (and intelligent) protagonist, a brilliantly drawn eccentric M-type boss, and truly menacing villains.
Mitchell also wrote under the pseudonym Patrick O. McGuire.