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== Publications == === Novels === ==== [[Inspector Alan Grant]] novels ==== All as Josephine Tey except where specified {{anchor|The Singing Sands}} # ''[[The Man in the Queue]]'' (also published as ''Killer in the Crowd'') (1929) [as Gordon Daviot]. Serialised, ''[[Dundee Evening Telegraph]]'', 12 August to 24 September 1930.<ref>"About the Author" in Tey, Josephine, ''The Man in the Queue''. [[Simon & Schuster#Imprints|Scribner Paperback Fiction]], 1995, p. 255.</ref> # ''[[A Shilling for Candles]]'' (1936)<ref name="dot">"About the Author" in Tey, Josephine, ''The Daughter of Time''. [[Simon & Schuster#Imprints|Touchstone]], 1995, pp. 207.</ref> (the basis of [[Alfred Hitchcock|Hitchcock]]'s 1937 film ''[[Young and Innocent (film)|Young and Innocent]]'') # ''[[The Franchise Affair (novel)|The Franchise Affair]]'' (1948) [Inspector Grant appears briefly at the beginning, mentioned a few times] ([[The Franchise Affair (film)|filmed in 1950]] starring [[Michael Denison]] and [[Dulcie Gray]]) # ''[[To Love and Be Wise]]'' (1950) # ''[[The Daughter of Time]]'' (1951) # ''[[The Singing Sands (novel)|The Singing Sands]]'' (1952) ==== Stand-alone mysteries ==== All as Josephine Tey. These novels are set in the same fictional 20th-century Britain as the Inspector Grant novels. * ''Miss Pym Disposes'' (1946)<ref name="dot" /> * ''[[Brat Farrar]]'' (or ''Come and Kill Me'') (1949) (the basis, without on-screen credit, for the 1963 [[Hammer Film Productions|Hammer]] production ''[[Paranoiac (film)|Paranoiac]]'') ==== Other novels ==== All as Gordon Daviot * ''Kif: An Unvarnished History'' (1929) - story of a boy who cares for horses and goes through WW1. * ''The Expensive Halo: A Fable without Moral'' (1931) - about two pairs of brothers and sisters, one aristocratic, the other working class. * ''The Privateer'' (1952) - a fictionalized reconstruction of the life of the privateer Henry Morgan. === Biography === * ''Claverhouse'' (1937) [as Gordon Daviot] (a life of the 17th-century cavalry leader [[John Graham, 1st Viscount Dundee|John Graham of Claverhouse, 1st Viscount Dundee]]) === Stage plays === All as Gordon Daviot except where specified * ''[[Richard of Bordeaux]]'' (First performed, Arts Theatre Club, London, 1932)<ref name="dot" /> * ''[[The Laughing Woman (play)|The Laughing Woman]]'' (New Theatre, London, 1934) * ''Queen of Scots'' (New Theatre, Aberdeen, 1934) * ''The Stars Bow Down'' (Published, 1939; first performed, Chatham House School, 1949) * ''Kirk o'Field'' (First performed, Theatre Royal, Glasgow, 1940) * ''Cornelia'' (First performed, Glasgow Citizens' Theatre, 1946) [as F. Craigie Howe].<ref>Henderson, pp. 240-46.</ref> Revived, 1963, as by Gordon Daviot<ref>The Stage, 25 April 1963, p. 14</ref> * ''The Little Dry Thorn'' (First performed, Glasgow Citizens' Theatre, 1946) * ''Leith Sands'' (Published, 1946: No stage performance yet traced) * ''Rahab'' (Published, 1946. First performed, Scottish Community Drama Association, 1947) * ''The Mother of Masé'' (Published, 1946: No stage performance yet traced) * ''Sara'' (Published, 1946: No stage performance yet traced) * ''Mrs Fry has a Visitor'' (Published, 1946: No stage performance yet traced) * ''Three Mrs Madderleys'' (Published, 1946: No stage performance yet traced) * ''Clarion Call'' (Published, 1946. First performed, Rugeley Town Hall, 31 July 1947) * ''Remember Cæsar'' (Published, 1946: No stage performance yet traced) * ''Valerius'' (First performed, Saville Theatre, London, 1948) * ''Barnharrow'' (First performed, Stirling Dramatic Club, 1949,<ref>The Scotsman, 8 February 1949</ref> One-act)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Daviot |first1=Gordon |title=Barnharrow |url=https://www.fadedpage.com/showbook.php?pid=20150569 |website=The Faded Page |publisher=Peter Davies |access-date=17 March 2020}}</ref> * ''The Balwhinnie Bomb'' (1949) * ''Dickon'' (First performed, Salisbury Playhouse, 1955) - a sympathetic portrayal of Richard III === Radio plays === All as Gordon Daviot * ''The Laughing Woman'' (Short version). BBC Home Service, 1 December 1940 * ''Leith Sands''. BBC Home Service, 13 December 1941 * ''Queen of Scots'' (Adapted by the author). BBC Home Service, 6 December 1942 * ''The Three Mrs Madderleys''. BBC Home Service, 14 June 1944 * ''Mrs Fry Has a Visitor''. BBC Home Service, 6 December 1944 * ''Three Women''. (Three playlets). BBC Home Service, 10 June 1945 * ''Remember Caesar''. BBC Home Service, 4 January 1946 * ''The Stars Bow Down''. BBC Home Service, 13 November 1948 * ''The Pen of My Aunt''. BBC Home Service, 15 February 1950 * ''The Pomp of Mrs Pomfret''. BBC Home Service, 23 October 1954 === Television plays === All as Gordon Daviot * ''Sweet Coz''. BBC Television, 4 January 1955 * ''Lady Charing Is Cross''. BBC Television, 8 January 1955 * ''The Staff Room''. BBC Television, 1 May 1956 * ''Barnharrow''. BBC Television, 1 May 1956 === Short stories === All as Gordon Daviot * ''Pat at Seven''. Westminster Gazette, 24 July 1926 * ''Janet''. Westminster Gazette, 2 October 1926 * ''Atalanta''. Westminster Gazette, 9 March 1927 * ''Pat Wears His Second Best Kilt''. Westminster Gazette, 17 December 1927 === Poems === All as Gordon Daviot * ''A Song of Racing''. Westminster Gazette, 16 April 1927 * ''Exile''. Westminster Gazette, 7 May 1927 * ''Deadlock''. Westminster Gazette, 21 May 1927 * ''A Song of Stations''. Westminster Gazette, 4 June 1927 * ''Roads''. Westminster Gazette, 20 August 1927 * ''In Memoriam HPFM''. Westminster Gazette, 10 September 1927 * ''Dyspepsia''. Westminster Gazette, 15 October 1927 * ''Reasons''. Westminster Gazette, 24 December 1927 * ''When I Am Old''. Westminster Gazette, 7 January 1928 === Short non-fiction === All as Gordon Daviot * ''Tossing the Caber''. Westminster Gazette, 10 September 1927
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