The FictionMags Index
Index: Items by Author: Page 8780
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Wood, Walter (chron.) (continued)
- * The Dash for Canada, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1910; as told by David Stuart
- * The Death-Struggle at Gravelotte, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1910; as told by Joseph Maus
- * The Defence of the Pekin Legations, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1909; as told by John Murphy
- * The Desert Battle of Tel-el-Keber, (ar) The Royal Magazine January 1907; as told by Robert William Tutt
- * Facing Death in the Arctic, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1908; as told by A. W. Greely
- * The Fall of Port Arthur, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1910; as told by Kinnosuka Kato
- * The Fall of Thebaw, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1910; as told by E. J. Owen
- * The Fight for Natal, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1911; as told by William Henry Wilkinson
- * The Fight for Plevna, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1906; as told by Frederick William von Herbert
- * The Fight for Spion Kop, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1908; as told by Thomas Humphreys
- * The Fight for the Swedish Gibraltar, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1910; as told by W. C. Puxty
- * Fighting the Fierce Malays, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1910; as told by T. Smith
- * The First Ironclad Fight: The “Merrimac” and the “Monitor”, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1909; as told by John Kerrigan
- * The First Sikh War, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1906; as told by John Howton
- * The Great Chicago Fire, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1909; as told by P. Lavin
- * The Hooded Man, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #56, November 1916; as told by Leonard Parker
- * Inkerman: The Soldiers’ Battle, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1907; as told by Patrick Conway
- * In the Grasp of the Flood, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1912; as told by John Gilley
- * The Johnstown Dam-Burst, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1909; as told by C. L. Cornelison
- * Kate Webster’s Crime, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #22, January 1914; as told by G. H. Rudd
- * The Lamson Case at Wimbledon, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #23, February 1914; as told by C. A. Smith
- * The Last Stand at Solferino, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1910; as told by Agostino Ginocchi
- * Living Links with Famous Trials (New Series):
* ___ No. I: The Case of Mrs. Dyer, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #53, August 1916; as told by Ex-Detective-Inspector Anderson
* ___ II: The Tottenham Outrage, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #54, September 1916; as told by Charles Dixon
* ___ No. III: The Southend Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #55, October 1916; as told by Robert Douthwaite
* ___ IV: The Hooded Man, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #56, November 1916; as told by Leonard Parker
- * Living Links with Famous Trials (Second Series):
* ___ I: The Moat Farm Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #28, July 1914
* ___ II: Palmer, England’s Greatest Poisoner, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #29, August 1914; as told by George Fletcher, J.P.
* ___ III: The Whitechapel Road Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #30, September 1914; as told by J. M. Steel
* ___ IV: The Penge Mystery, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #31, October 1914
* ___ V: The Ardlamont Case, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #32, November 1914; as told by J. M. Steel
* ___ VI: The Tichborne Case, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #33, December 1914
- * Living Links with Famous Trials:
* ___ Crippen’s Callous Crime, (cl) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #36, March 1915
* ___ The Newcastle Train Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #38, May 1915; as told by J. Jamieson
* ___ I: The Brighton Railway Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #19, October 1913; as told by Thos. Picknell
* ___ II: Charles Peace, the Master Criminal, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #20, November 1913; as told by Alfred Tate
* ___ III: The Yarmouth Beach Murder Mystery, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #21, December 1913; as told by Frank H. Sayers
* ___ IV: Kate Webster’s Crime, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #22, January 1914; as told by G. H. Rudd
* ___ V: The Lamson Case at Wimbledon, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #23, February 1914; as told by C. A. Smith
- * London Under Arms, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1910; as told by James Cornish
- * The Loss of the “Drummond Castle”, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1907; as told by W. J. Godbolt
- * The Loss of the Liner “Elbe”, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1906; as told by Anna Böcker
- * The Loss of the “Princess Alice”, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1907; as told by G. W. Linnecar
- * The Loss of the “Stella”, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1906; as told by Greta Williams
- * The Loss of the Troopship “Birkenhead”, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1905; as told by W. Smith
- * The Lost Guns and Colours, (ss) The Royal Magazine February 1906; as told by Francis J. Naylor
- * The Moat Farm Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #28, July 1914
- * The Mountain of Death, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1911; as told by Edward William Freeman
- * The Newcastle Train Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #38, May 1915; as told by J. Jamieson
- * The New Zealand War, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1908; as told by George Rose
- * On the Battle Border, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #58, January 1917
- * The Outbreak of the Indian Mutiny, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1906; as told by Joseph Bowater
- * Palmer, England’s Greatest Poisoner, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #29, August 1914; as told by George Fletcher, J.P.
- * The Penge Mystery, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #31, October 1914
- * The Persian Campaign, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1910; as told by J. Elkington
- * Rangoon: The Storming of the Golden Pagoda, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1909; as told by George Goddard
- * The Red River Expedition, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1909; as told by James Cain
- * The Relief of Chitral, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1908; as told by Richard Alexander Stunt
- * The Relief of Emin Pasha, (ar) The Royal Magazine January 1908; as told by William Hoffman
- * The “Rocket” and the World’s First Railway, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1909; as told by Edward Entwhistle
- * The San Francisco Earthquake, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1908; as told by Anne Whitley
- * The Saving of H.M.S. “Calliope” and the Loss of H.M.S. “Victoria”, (ss) The Royal Magazine January 1906; as told by Wm. Marshfield, R.N.
- * Sebastopol: The Storming of the Redan, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1905; as told by William Kimberlin
- * The Siege and Storm of Delhi, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1908; as told by Thomas Pearce
- * The Siege of Paris: The Reign of Terror, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1908; as told by Thomas Symonds
- * A Soldier’s Wife in the Crimea, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1908; as told by Elizabeth Evans
- * South Africa: Chasing a Phantom Army, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1909; as told by David James Dunning
- * The Southend Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #55, October 1916; as told by Robert Douthwaite
- * Storming the Taku Forts, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1910; as told by John Dempsey
- * Survivors’ Tales of Great Events:
* ___ VII. The Loss of the Troopship “Birkenhead”, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1905; as told by W. Smith
* ___ VIII. Sebastopol: The Storming of the Redan, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1905; as told by William Kimberlin
* ___ XII. The Saving of H.M.S. “Calliope” and the Loss of H.M.S. “Victoria”, (ss) The Royal Magazine January 1906; as told by Wm. Marshfield, R.N.
* ___ XIII. The Lost Guns and Colours, (ss) The Royal Magazine February 1906; as told by Francis J. Naylor
* ___ XV. The Burning of the Transport “Sarah Sands”, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1906; as told by George Diggens
* ___ XVI. The Outbreak of the Indian Mutiny, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1906; as told by Joseph Bowater
* ___ XVII. The Battle of the Alma, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1906; as told by J. Parkinson
* ___ XVIII. The Loss of the Liner “Elbe”, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1906; as told by Anna Böcker
* ___ XIX. The First Sikh War, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1906; as told by John Howton
* ___ XX. Chillianwalla: A Jungle Battle, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1906; as told by J. Ford
* ___ XXI. The Loss of the “Stella”, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1906; as told by Greta Williams
* ___ No. XXIII. The Fight for Plevna, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1906; as told by Frederick William von Herbert
* ___ No. XXIV. The Desert Battle of Tel-el-Keber, (ar) The Royal Magazine January 1907; as told by Robert William Tutt
* ___ No. XXV. With Gordon in China—The Storming of Canton, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1907; as told by John Clarke
* ___ No. XXVI. The Tragedy of Majuba Hill, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1907; as told by William Samuel Clark
* ___ No. XXVII. The Afridi War, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1907; as told by James Sullivan
* ___ No. XXVIII. The Bombardment of Alexandria, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1907; as told by Israel Harding
* ___ No. XXVIII. The Tragedy of Gordon’s Relief, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1907 [Ref. Charles George Gordon]; as told by Edward Alfred Haynes
* ___ No. XXIX. The Crushing of the Dervishes, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1907; as told by George Hamilton
* ___ XXXI. The Loss of the “Princess Alice”, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1907; as told by G. W. Linnecar
* ___ XXXII. The Swoop on Fashoda, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1907; as told by Peter Govier
* ___ XXXIII. Inkerman: The Soldiers’ Battle, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1907; as told by Patrick Conway
* ___ XXXIV. The Loss of the “Drummond Castle”, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1907; as told by W. J. Godbolt
* ___ XXXV. The Waterloo Campaign: Napoleon at the Battle of Ligny, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1907; as told by Anne Joséphine Ruday
* ___ XXXVI. The Relief of Emin Pasha, (ar) The Royal Magazine January 1908; as told by William Hoffman
* ___ XXXVII. The Relief of Chitral, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1908; as told by Richard Alexander Stunt
* ___ XXXVIII. The New Zealand War, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1908; as told by George Rose
* ___ XXXIX. The Abyssinian War: The Storming of Magdala, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1908; as told by George Dunlop
* ___ No. XL. The Siege and Storm of Delhi, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1908; as told by Thomas Pearce
* ___ No. XLI. To Benin, the City of Blood, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1908; as told by G. Ellison & Colour-Sergeant Robotham
* ___ No. XLII. A Soldier’s Wife in the Crimea, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1908; as told by Elizabeth Evans
* ___ No. XLIII. The Siege of Paris: The Reign of Terror, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1908; as told by Thomas Symonds
* ___ No. XLIV. With Garibaldi’s English Legion, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1908; as told by James Forge
* ___ No. XLV. The San Francisco Earthquake, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1908; as told by Anne Whitley
* ___ No. XLVI. The Fight for Spion Kop, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1908; as told by Thomas Humphreys
* ___ No. XLVII. Facing Death in the Arctic, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1908; as told by A. W. Greely
* ___ No. XLVIII. The Broken Square at Abu Klea, (ar) The Royal Magazine January 1909; as told by William Burge
* ___ No. XLIX. Rangoon: The Storming of the Golden Pagoda, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1909; as told by George Goddard
* ___ No. L. The Defence of the Pekin Legations, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1909; as told by John Murphy
* ___ No. LI. South Africa: Chasing a Phantom Army, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1909; as told by David James Dunning
* ___ No. LII. The Johnstown Dam-Burst, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1909; as told by C. L. Cornelison
* ___ No. LIII. The First Ironclad Fight: The “Merrimac” and the “Monitor”, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1909; as told by John Kerrigan
* ___ No. LIV. The “Rocket” and the World’s First Railway, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1909; as told by Edward Entwhistle
* ___ No. LV. The 10th Hussars at Cabul River, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1909; as told by Thomas McIntosh
* ___ No. LVI. The Great Chicago Fire, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1909; as told by P. Lavin
* ___ No. LVII. The Red River Expedition, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1909; as told by James Cain
* ___ No. LVIII. The Bombardment of Acre, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1909; as told by Francis Trevas
* ___ No. LIX. The “Braves” on the War-Path, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1909; as told by J. Hooper
* ___ No. LX Britain’s Greatest Colliery Disaster, (ar) The Royal Magazine January 1910; as told by William Henry Hart
* ___ No. LXI The Fight for the Swedish Gibraltar, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1910; as told by W. C. Puxty
* ___ No. LXII The Persian Campaign, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1910; as told by J. Elkington
* ___ No. LXIII London Under Arms, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1910; as told by James Cornish
* ___ No. LXIV. The Dash for Canada, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1910; as told by David Stuart
* ___ No. LXV. The Fall of Thebaw, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1910; as told by E. J. Owen
* ___ LXVI. The Death-Struggle at Gravelotte, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1910; as told by Joseph Maus
* ___ No. LXVII. Storming the Taku Forts, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1910; as told by John Dempsey
* ___ No. LXVIII. The Last Stand at Solferino, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1910; as told by Agostino Ginocchi
* ___ No. LXIX. A City of the Dead, (ar) The Royal Magazine October 1910; as told by J. Platt Barratt
* ___ No. LXX. Fighting the Fierce Malays, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1910; as told by T. Smith
* ___ No. LXXVI. The Fall of Port Arthur, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1910; as told by Kinnosuka Kato
* ___ No. LXXII. When Cholera Came to London, (ar) The Royal Magazine January 1911; as told by Robert Waudby
* ___ No. LXXIII. The Call of the Death-Drum, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1911; as told by J. Flynn
- * Survivor’s Tales of Great Events:
* ___ No. LXXIV. The Tragedy of the Paris Bazaar, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1911; as told by Madame Charont
- * Survivors’ Tales of Great Events:
* ___ No. LXXVI The Mountain of Death, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1911; as told by Edward William Freeman
* ___ No. LXXVII The Fight for Natal, (ar) The Royal Magazine July 1911; as told by William Henry Wilkinson
* ___ No. LXXVIII A Tragedy of the Sea, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1911; as told by Josef Andren
* ___ No. LXXIX Austria at Bay, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1911; as told by F. Horoske
- * The Swoop on Fashoda, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1907; as told by Peter Govier
- * The 10th Hussars at Cabul River, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1909; as told by Thomas McIntosh
- * The Tichborne Case, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #33, December 1914
- * To Benin, the City of Blood, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1908; as told by G. Ellison & Colour-Sergeant Robotham
- * The Tottenham Outrage, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #54, September 1916; as told by Charles Dixon
- * The Tragedy of Gordon’s Relief, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1907 [Ref. Charles George Gordon]; as told by Edward Alfred Haynes
- * The Tragedy of Majuba Hill, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1907; as told by William Samuel Clark
- * The Tragedy of the Paris Bazaar, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1911; as told by Madame Charont
- * A Tragedy of the Sea, (ar) The Royal Magazine August 1911; as told by Josef Andren
- * The Waterloo Campaign: Napoleon at the Battle of Ligny, (ar) The Royal Magazine December 1907; as told by Anne Joséphine Ruday
- * When Cholera Came to London, (ar) The Royal Magazine January 1911; as told by Robert Waudby
- * The Whitechapel Road Murder, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #30, September 1914; as told by J. M. Steel
- * With Garibaldi’s English Legion, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1908; as told by James Forge
- * With Gordon in China—The Storming of Canton, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1907; as told by John Clarke
- * The World Through Other Eyes:
* ___ XVIII. By Royal Command, (ar) The Royal Magazine September 1905; as told by Raymond Blathwayt
- * The Yarmouth Beach Murder Mystery, (ar) Cassell’s Magazine of Fiction #21, December 1913; as told by Frank H. Sayers
_____, ed.
- * The Battle of Mons and the Great Retreat by J. Parkinson, (ar) The London Magazine December 1914
- * The Burning of the Battleship “Bombay” by H. J. Carr, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1905
- * The Charge of the Light Brigade by Henry Herbert, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1905
- * The Defense of the Residency of Lucknow by J. J. McLeod Innes, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1905
- * Gassed Near Hill 60 by R. G. Simmins, (ar) The London Magazine November 1915
- * How They Held Rorke’s Drift by Alfred Henry Hook, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1905
- * How Trooper Potts Won the V.C. on Burnt Hill by Frederick William Owen Potts, (ar) The London Magazine January 1916
- * The Last Battle by Erasmus Ommanney, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1905
- * “L” Battery’s Heroic Stand by Gunner Darbyshire, (ar) The London Magazine March 1915
- * A Linesman’s Adventures in Gallipoli by John Frank Gray, (ar) The London Magazine March 1916
- * The Most Critical Day of All by F. W. Holmes, (ar) The London Magazine April 1915
- * Navarino: The Last Battle Between Sailing Ships by Erasmus Ommanney, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1905
- * The Rout of the Prussian Guard at Ypres by H. J. Polley, (ar) The London Magazine June 1915
- * The Suppression of the Chinese Pirates by Charles Dalrymple Hay, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1905
- * Survivors’ Tales of Great Events:
* ___ No. I. How They Held Rorke’s Drift by Alfred Henry Hook, (ar) The Royal Magazine February 1905
* ___ No. II. The Charge of the Light Brigade by Henry Herbert, (ar) The Royal Magazine March 1905
* ___ No. III. Navarino: The Last Battle Between Sailing Ships by Erasmus Ommanney, (ar) The Royal Magazine April 1905
* ___ IV. The Defense of the Residency of Lucknow by J. J. McLeod Innes, (ar) The Royal Magazine May 1905
* ___ V. The Suppression of the Chinese Pirates by Charles Dalrymple Hay, (ar) The Royal Magazine June 1905
* ___ X. The Burning of the Battleship “Bombay” by H. J. Carr, (ar) The Royal Magazine November 1905
- * A Thrilling Escape from Behind the German Lines by Frederic Coleman, (ar) The London Magazine December 1915
- * Torpedoed by C. C. Nurse, A.B., (ar) The London Magazine January 1915
- * True Stories of the Great War:
* ___ Gassed Near Hill 60 by R. G. Simmins, (ar) The London Magazine November 1915
* ___ How Trooper Potts Won the V.C. on Burnt Hill by Frederick William Owen Potts, (ar) The London Magazine January 1916
* ___ A Linesman’s Adventures in Gallipoli by John Frank Gray, (ar) The London Magazine March 1916
* ___ A Thrilling Escape from Behind the German Lines by Frederic Coleman, (ar) The London Magazine December 1915
* ___ No. 1. The Battle of Mons and the Great Retreat by J. Parkinson, (ar) The London Magazine December 1914
* ___ No. 2. Torpedoed by C. C. Nurse, A.B., (ar) The London Magazine January 1915
* ___ No. 3. The Victory of the Marne by G. Gilliam, (ar) The London Magazine February 1915
* ___ No. 4. “L” Battery’s Heroic Stand by Gunner Darbyshire, (ar) The London Magazine March 1915
* ___ No. 5. The Most Critical Day of All by F. W. Holmes, (ar) The London Magazine April 1915
* ___ No. 7. The Rout of the Prussian Guard at Ypres by H. J. Polley, (ar) The London Magazine June 1915
- * The Victory of the Marne by G. Gilliam, (ar) The London Magazine February 1915
Wood, Wendell (fl. 1940s) (chron.)
- * A Business Proposition, (ss) Breezy Stories January 1941
- * First Aid to Husbands, (nv) Young’s Realistic Stories April 1942
- * I Belong to You, (nv) Breezy Stories December 1941
- * Joan Looks at Life, (nv) Breezy Stories May 1942
- * Linda Gets a Job, (nv) Breezy Stories August 1941
- * Love Goes On, (nv) Breezy Stories June 1941
- * No Life Without Her, (nv) Breezy Stories January 1940
- * Now and Forever, (nv) Breezy Stories April 1941
- * An Obsolete Custom, (nv) Young’s Realistic Stories July 1941
- * One Life to Live, (ss) Breezy Stories April 1943
- * Threnody of Love, (nv) Breezy Stories March 1942
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