Thomas H. Cook
1947
Thomas H. Cook is American best-selling author famously known for his 1996 novel The Chatham School Affair that won an Edgar Award awarded by the Mystery Writers of America. Cook was born in Fort Payne in Alabama in the United States. He holds an undergraduate degree from Georgia State College, masters degree in American History from Hunter College and a Ph.D. from Columbia University. Cook taught English and history from 1978 to 1981 at Dekalb Community College and also worked at Hunter College as a book review editor from 1978 to 1982 and then became a full-time writer.
Publication Order
Standalone Books
The City When It Rains
1991
Blood Innocents
1980
The Orchids
1982
Tabernacle
1983
Elena
1986
Streets of Fire
1989
Evidence of Blood
1991
Mortal Memory
1993
Breakheart Hill
1995
The Chatham School Affair
1996
Instruments of Night
1998
The Interrogation
1998
Places in the Dark
2000
Taken
2002
Moon Over Manhattan
2003
Into the Web
2004
Peril
2004
Red Leaves
2005
The Cloud of Unknowing / The Murmur of Stones
2006
Master of the Delta
2008
The Fate of Katherine Carr
2009
The Last Talk with Lola Faye
2010
The Quest for Anna Klein
2011
The Crime of Julian Wells
2012
Sandrine's Case / Sandrine
2013
A Dancer in the Dust
2014
Fatherhood and Other Stories
2013