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Works published under a pseudonym

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Saucy Jacky postcard
message received in 1888, which claims to have been written by the serial killer now known as Jack the Ripper
Colonel Sun
novel by Kingsley Amis
The Concept of Anxiety
book by Søren Kierkegaard
Lettres provinciales
book by Blaise Pascal
The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.
collection of short stories and essays by Washington Irving
A Daughter's a Daughter
book by Agatha Christie
Original Soundtracks 1
1995 album by Passengers (U2 + Brian Eno)
Who Goes There?
1938 novella by John W. Campbell
Absent in the Spring
1944 novel by Agatha Christie
The Eyes of Darkness
1981 novel by Dean Koontz
The Devil's Elixirs
novel by E. T. A. Hoffmann
Deltora Quest series
series of 15 books by Jennifer Rowe (as Emily Rodda)
The Regulators
novel by Stephen King
The Quest for Fire
novel by the French author J.-H. Rosny aîné
Unfinished Portrait
novel by Agatha Christie
The Rose and the Yew Tree
novel by Agatha Christie
The Ethical Slut
book by Dossie Easton and Janet Hardy
The Carnal Prayer Mat
1657 novel by Li Yu
The Atlas of Creation
book by Harun Yahya
Giant's Bread
book by Agatha Christie
Q
novel by Luther Blissett
Tom Swift
fictional literary character and book series
Mas-Kom-Yah
Mas-Kom-Yah is a theatre play written in 1975 by 20-year-old Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who later served as Mayor of Istanbul, Prime Minister of Turkey and President of Turkey, based on the book Kızıl Pençe ("Red Claw") by the Islamist preacher Mustafa Bayburtlu. The name Mas-Kom-Yah is an abbreviation for Mason, Komünist ve Yahudi (Freemason, Communist and Jew).
Adam Bede
1859 novel by George Eliot
The Burden
1956 novel by Agatha Christie
Did Six Million Really Die?
Holocaust denial pamphlet
Thrillington
Thrillington is an album by the English musician Paul McCartney, recorded under the pseudonym Percy "Thrills" Thrillington. It was released in April 1977 in the UK and in May 1977 in the US. It is an instrumental covers album of Paul and Linda McCartney's 1971 album Ram.
The Death of Grass
1956 novel by John Christopher
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
2009 novel by Seth Grahame-Smith
Story of the Eye
book by Georges Bataille
The Heart of Midlothian
novel by Walter Scott
The Gift
novel by Vladimir Nabokov
Sweet Gwendoline
fictional character
A Certain Scientific Accelerator
Japanese manga series
Ask Ann Landers
American daily advice column by Ann Landers (pseudonym), originated 1943 by Ruth Crowley
The Tripods
British young adult novel series
Heavy Object
Japanese light novel series
The Woman in the Window
novel by A. J. Finn
The Education of Little Tree
1976 novel by Forrest Carter
King, Queen, Knave
novel by Vladimir Nabokov
A Reminiscence of Dr. Samuel Johnson
short story by H. P. Lovecraft
Lucky Starr series
novel series by Isaac Asimov
Vindiciae contra tyrannos
influential Huguenot tract published in Basel in 1579
I Spit on Your Graves
novel by Vernon Sullivan
Kuso Miso Technique
1987 Japanese one-shot manga by Junichi Yamakawa
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
autobiography by Harriet Jacobs
A Case of Need
1968 novel by Michael Crichton
Les Onze Mille Verges
novel by Guillaume Apollinaire
Might is Right
non-fiction work by Arthur Desmond
Stages on Life's Way
1845 essay by Søren Kierkegaard
Wolf Totem
2004 Chinese novel
The Blue Ridge Rangers
1973 debut studio album by The Blue Ridge Rangers a.k.a. John Fogerty
The Death Ship
1926 novel by B. Traven
The Song of the Blood-Red Flower
a novel by Johannes Linnankoski
Gor
Gor () is the fictional setting for a series of sword and planet novels written by philosophy professor John Lange, writing as John Norman. The setting was first described in the 1966 novel Tarnsman of Gor. The series is inspired by science fantasy pulp fiction works by Edgar Rice Burroughs, such as the Barsoom series. It also includes erotica and philosophical content. The Gor series repeatedly depicts men abducting and physically and sexually brutalizing women, who grow to enjoy their submissive state. According to The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, Norman's "sexual philosophy" is "widely
The Vampire
1841 novella by Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy
Concluding Unscientific Postscript to Philosophical Fragments
essay by Søren Kierkegaard
Junkie
novel by William S. Burroughs
Emmanuelle
novel by Emmanuelle Arsan
The Leather Boys
1964 film by Sidney J. Furie