Brendan DuBois

Brendan DuBois is an American mystery fiction and suspense writer[1] who has twice won a Shamus Award for Best Short Story of the Year. He also had his short story "The Dark Snow'" published in Best American Mystery Stories of the Century, edited by Otto Penzler and Tony Hillerman (ISBN 0618012710). Despite success in those primary genres, he is best known for his alternate history novel Resurrection Day, which won the Sidewise Award for Alternate History. He was the champion on the September 28, 2012 episode of Jeopardy! and defeated the Beast on the February 24, 2015 episode of The Chase.[2]

Works

Stand Alones

  • Resurrection Day (1998)
  • Six Days (2001)
  • Betrayed (2003)
  • Final Winter (2006)
  • Twilight (aka Dead of Night) (2007)
  • Amerikan Eagle (written as Alan Glenn) (2011)
  • Night Road (2016)
  • The Negotiator (2018)
  • The First Lady (2018)
  • The Cornwalls Are Gone (2019)

Lewis Cole series

  1. Dead Sand (1994)
  2. Black Tide (1995)
  3. Shattered Shell (1999)
  4. Killer Waves (2001)
  5. Buried Dreams (2004)
  6. Primary Storm (2006)
  7. Deadly Cove (2011)
  8. Fatal Harbor (2014)
  9. Blood Foam (2015)
  10. Storm Cell (2016)
  11. Hard Aground (2018)

Empire of the North (e-Books)

  1. The Noble Warrior (2012)
  2. The Noble Prisoner (2012)
  3. The Noble Prince (2012)

Dark Victory

  1. Dark Victory (2015)
  2. Red Vengeance (2017)
  3. Black Triumph (2018)

Anthologies and Collections

Title Contents Publication Date Publisher
The Dark Snow and Other Mysteries 2002 Crippen & Landru
Tales from the Dark Woods 2002
Crimes By Moonlight The Trespassers 2010 Berkley Publishing (ebook)
Death of a Gemini 2011
Blue and Gray Tales of Mystery 2012
The Final Ballot in MWA Collection Vengeance 2012
Lost on the Moon and Other Tales Of Science Fiction 2013

References

  1. Rule, Rebecca (May 1, 1994). "A Seacoast detective, with depth". The Telegraph. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  2. Hawkins, Erik (February 25, 2015). "Exeter man wins $17,500 on Game Show Network". Seacoast Online. Retrieved September 4, 2016.


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