Author:George Kibbe Turner

Works

 * Youth (1901)
 * The Taskmasters (1902)
 * Galveston: A Business Corporation (1906)
 * The City of Chicago: A Study of the Great Immoralities (1907)
 * The Men Who Learned to Fly : the Wright Brothers' story of their experiments, the sensations of flight and of their estimate of the future of the aeroplane (1908)
 * The Daughters of the Poor : a plain story of the development of New York city as a leading center of the white slave trade of the world, under Tammany Hall (1909)
 * The last Christian (1914)
 * The Biography Of A Million Dollars (1918)
 * Red Friday (1919)
 * Hagar's Hoard (1920)
 * White Shoulders (1921)
 * Those Who Dance (1922?)
 * The Girl in the Glass Cage (1927)

Works from periodicals

 * "Across the State" (1903 Jan, McClure's Magazine/Volume 20) (ss)
 * "The Cannibal King" (1910 Feb, McClure's Magazine) (ss)
 * "What Organized Labor Wants. An Interview with Samuel Gompers," (1909 Nov, McClure's Magazine/Volume 32)
 * "The Puzzle of the Under-world" (1913 July, McClure's Magazine/Volume 41) (article?)
 * "Piracy in Reverse" (1922 Feb 18, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)
 * "Whereas, the Women" (1922 July 22, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)
 * "The Pom and the Parrot" (1923 Mar, The Red Book Magazine) (ss)
 * "The Falling Bean" (1924 July 5, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)

Longer works and series

 * "White Shoulders" (1921 Jan 15—Feb 12, The Saturday Evening Post) (5-part serial)
 * "Moonlight" (1921 Aug—Oct, The Red Book Magazine) (3-part serial)
 * Those Who Dance" (1922 Nov, Everybody's Magazine) (novella)
 * Chibosh series
 * 1) "The Phantom Factory and the Million-Dollar Dog"   (1923 Sep 15, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)
 * 2) "The Milk Bath and the Card Catalogue" (1923 Sep 29, The Saturday Evening Post) (novelette)
 * 3) "The Lone Lady in Black and the Roman-Nosed Baby"   (1923 Oct 6, The Saturday Evening Post) (novelette)
 * 4) "The Thumbless Black Hand, or the Coming of Gonfardino" (1923 Oct 20, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)
 * 5) "The Seven Dead Men"   (1923 Nov 3, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)