4/16/15

Gasping for Breath


"They're queer-looking things... some of 'em look like sea-monsters that haven't grown up."
 - Sgt. Heath (S.S. van Dine's The Dragon Murder Case, 1934) 
The Case of the Gold-digger's Purse (1942) is the twenty-sixth entry in Erle Stanley Gardner's Perry Mason series and the opening of the story enmeshed the cunning defense-attorney in a tangle of extortion, theft and murder – which began with a seemingly uninteresting and innocent consultation on gold fish.

Harrington Faulkner is in the real-estate business, where he amassed a king's ransom, but only cultivated a single passion to spend his dollars on: breeding gold fish.

Faulkner raised a particular strain of Veiltail Moor Telescopes, a gold fish completely cloaked in funeral black and often referred to as the "Fish of Death," but this school of rare fish are suffering from a deadly decease known as gill fever. A young, poor chemist and pet shop employee, Tom Gridley, developed a formula that cures gill fever. However, Gridley is suffering from tuberculoses and should take a break from work to recover, but he can't afford to leave his job and now his beautiful girlfriend, Sally Madison, is extorting thousands of dollars from Faulkner – in exchange for the formula.

A gold-digging extortionist and a bout of gill fever aren't the only plagues pestering the aquarist. Faulkner has had a fall-out with his business partner, Elmer Carson, who slapped a restraining order on Faulkner, which forbids him from removing the aquarium and its content from their shared office.

Mason is reluctant to get involved, but curiosity keeps getting the best of him until he and Della Street are in legitimate danger of becoming accessories after the fact in the murder of Harrington Faulkner. It begins when the office is burgled and the aquarium looted, which gives Mason an opportunity to make some astute deduction about the soup ladle, the pole it was mounted on and the size of the room. By the way, the theft was briefly teased as a locked room mystery. 

The gold fish are eventually found, alongside Faulkner's body, on the bloodstained bathroom floor of his home and Mason's typical, almost routine manipulation in murder cases has now dug him a hole for two. 

One of the most attractive aspects of the Perry Mason series, as an unabashed neo-classicist, is how densely plotted each novel is. There's barely any fat on the bone, so to speak. The multitude of cross-and hidden relationships and the motives that drives those relationships are often complex, which is exactly the case here, but there's also the physical evidence and how you can play around with that. There's a missing bullet from a previous murder attempt on Faulkner, a half dead gold fish that could indicate the time of death, fooling around with fingerprints and cheque stubs – and the titular purse stuffed with damning evidence.

Mason has to play a tight game of bluff poker and live up to his name as a courtroom magician in a preliminary hearing to prevent a murder trial for the wrong person. The courtroom chapters tended to drag on a bit, but you can't blame craftsmen, Gardner and Mason, for taking the time to work their magic.

In short: a good mystery from a solid series. Hopefully, the next review/blog-post will be substantially better written than this one.

The previous Perry Mason novels I have reviewed:

The Case of the Gold-digger's Purse (1942)
The Case of the Drowsy Mosquito (1943)
The Case of the Lonely Heiress (1948)

6 comments:

  1. I haven't got to his 1940s books yet but his 1930s stuff is great fun. Especially the way Mason sails so incredibly close to the wind but always gets away with it. Which was apparently Gardner's own style as a trial lawyer.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I keep picking the 1940s books, but did read The Case from the Counterfeit Eye, in the pre-blogging days, and it was indeed great fun. Mason was even less hesitant with manupilating the evidence than in the ones from the 40s. Great fun, indeed!

      Delete
  2. Thanks for that TC. I read a lot of these as a kind but more recently I have really enjoyed the earlier, hardboiled entries, where Perry seems to never actually reach the courtroom - perverse perhaps for a series about a lawyer (my old profession too), but I seem to like those earlier ones better!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Which one is the best from those earlier, hardboiled Perry Mason novels? I know I have The Case of the Velvet Claws, but that was apparently a rip-off of Hammett (or so I have read).

      Delete
  3. I think the best Perry Mason books are from the 1950s. But there are plenty of enjoyable Perry Mason mysteries from the Forties. Love the cover on this one!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I have read all 85 of the Perry Mason mysteries, and must say that I like the ones from the 1940s the best, although they were all good.

    ReplyDelete