Dark Harvest’s Night Vision series was a masterpiece in horror anthologies from 1984 to 1991. When the publisher switched focus to mystery fiction in the early 1990s, they apparently tried to recreate the magic (and format) with Criminal Intent 1 (1993). Boldly flagged with the number “1,” the venture sadly failed, and Dark Harvest produced no more books after 1993, and thus, no additional anthologies that received the addition of a number after the title.

The format: three writers would submit 100 words of original fiction. Some writers would be established names in the field, others would be new, talented voices. Criminal Intent 1 includes one story each from Ed Gorman, Bill Pronzini, and Maria Muller. All three name, by that time, appear to be established writers. It’s a great concept. Too bad it never went further.


Bill Pronzini contributed another book for Dark Harvest in 1993: Carmody’s Run. This book contains four stories featuring his character, Carmody. All the stories were originally written and published in the 1970s, and there’s an introduction about the character that appears to be written specially for this book.

Sadly, my copy has two tears in the dust jacket, one in the front, and one in the back. That’s what happens sometimes when you buy things online, and actual photographs are not included. Still, for $15 it’s not a bad deal.

According to ISFDB, these were the last two Dark Harvest books published. However, I’ve seen a pair of Lawrence Block books from Dark Harvest listed online, not in the list from that reference site. Ironically, just as the first Dark Harvest book—by George R. R. Martin—generally starts above $200 from current dealers, one of those Block books also appears to fetch a high price. So, the modern collector gets to bookend the cost of acquiring a complete set of Dark Harvest books with a pair that cost more than 10x the price of some books.