The title derived from a popular mystery magazine of the same name.
Brittain decided he wanted to be a 5th-grade teacher, and in addition to teaching, used to read stories in mystery magazines.
Over the next 20 years he wrote numerous stories for the pulp detective and mystery magazines, always under pseudonyms.
In a carer that would span seventy-plus years, Treat wrote several hundred short stories for mystery magazines and other publications.
During a career that spanned some 70 years, Mr. Treat wrote several hundred short stories for mystery magazines and other publications.
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, the logo said in bright red letters.
There is, after all, an entire industry devoted to fictitious murder: crime novels, mystery magazines, cinematic thrillers, and the like.
Many of his 130 stories have been published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.
Many of his police stories appeared in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.
One of the stories, however, had been published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.