Margot Bennett Standalone Novels books in order

A complete list of Margot Bennett's standalone novels in publication order, from Time to Change Hats (1945) to The Furious Masters (1968).

Reading order

# Title Published Author Buy on Amazon
1 Time to Change Hats 1945 Margot Bennett Buy
2 Away Went the Little Fish 1946 Margot Bennett Buy
3 The Golden Pebble 1948 Margot Bennett N/A
4 The Widow of Bath 1952 Margot Bennett Buy
5 Farewell Crown & Goodbye King 1952 Margot Bennett Buy
6 The Man Who Didn’t Fly 1955 Margot Bennett Buy
7 The Long Way Back 1955 Margot Bennett Buy
8 Someone from the Past 1958 Margot Bennett Buy
9 That Summer’s Earthquake 1963 Margot Bennett Buy
10 The Intelligent Woman’s Guide to Atomic Radiation 1964 Margot Bennett Buy
11 The Furious Masters 1968 Margot Bennett Buy

Margot Bennett’s eleven standalone novels span the years 1945 to 1968. Her early books, including Time to Change Hats, Away Went the Little Fish, and The Golden Pebble, established her as a skilled writer of crime and suspense fiction. The Widow of Bath (1952) and Farewell Crown & Goodbye King (1952) continued to build her reputation.

The mid-1950s produced her most notable works: The Man Who Didn’t Fly and The Long Way Back, published in the same year. Someone from the Past (1958) and That Summer’s Earthquake (1963) followed, along with the non-fiction Intelligent Woman’s Guide to Atomic Radiation. The Furious Masters (1968) was her final published novel.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many books are in the Margot Bennett Standalone Novels series?

There are eleven books in the Margot Bennett Standalone Novels series, published between 1945 and 1968.

What is the first book in the Margot Bennett Standalone Novels series?

The first book in the Margot Bennett Standalone Novels series is Time to Change Hats, published in 1945.

Did Margot Bennett write only crime fiction?

While most of Bennett’s novels are crime fiction or suspense, she also wrote The Long Way Back (1955), a science fiction novel about survivors in a post-nuclear world, and The Intelligent Woman’s Guide to Atomic Radiation (1964), a non-fiction guide. Her range was broader than her reputation for mystery fiction suggests.

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