The cover art was designed by Kazuki, with additional design by Ben Drury and James Lavelle.
Amazing Stories | Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories | Seven Stories Press | Just So Stories | Startling Stories | Celebrity Ghost Stories | Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt | Women: Stories of Passion | The Sneetches and Other Stories | James May's Toy Stories | Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories | The Saxon Stories | Ted Scott Flying Stories | Star Stories | List of Dave and Morley stories | Five Summer Stories | Yodok Stories | Word Is Out: Stories of Some of Our Lives | The Keepsake Stories | The Home Song Stories | The Best American Short Stories | Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio | Star Science Fiction Stories No.3 | Seven Stories | Planet Stories | Our Stories Films | Nightmares and Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King | New Stories from the South | Lady Chatterly's Stories | Kitchen Stories |
The book includes personal anecdotes as well as photographs, and was described by Joseph Lelyveld of The New York Times as a "graceful and accurate book" that makes the reader wish for more stories.
With the great success of Anne of Green Gables in 1908 and the sequel Anne of Avonlea in 1909, Montgomery was under pressure from her publisher to deliver more stories about Anne.
According to Motomu Toriyama, he had wanted to tell more stories about Lightning, and the DLC had not provided a satisfactory ending for her.
No More Stories... is produced by Rich Costey who also produced their breakthrough album Frengers, and is the band's first album as an official three-piece after bass player Johan Wohlert left to spend time with his family.
"No More Stories, Good or Bad: de Man's Criticisms of Derrida on Rousseau," in David Wood (ed.), Derrida: A Critical Reader (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992).
In the BBC radio adaptation starring Clive Merrison as Holmes and Michael Williams as Watson, because of his change of attitude towards fame (acquired while traveling in Tibet during his "death"), Holmes at the beginning informs Watson that "there must be no more stories", but that Watson should continue to keep notes on their cases so as to stockpile them for possible future publication.
Her novels were so successful that, after her death, her estate hired a ghost writer, Andrew Neiderman, to write more stories to be published under her name.