Thursday, July 30, 2020

The Case of the Velvet Claws (Perry Mason) by Erle Stanley Gardner

When a self-absorbed woman named “Eva Griffin” comes to Perry Mason claiming her powerful
husband is blackmailing her, Perry’s intrepid secretary Della Street doesn’t trust her. That’s our first clue that neither should we. Later, when Eva overhears her husband arguing with a man just before being shot, she claims it was Perry’s voice she heard arguing with the murdered man. A trustworthy client she is not!  But in true Perry Mason style, he vows to fight for his client no matter the cost.

This is the very first Perry Mason novel, originally published in 1933.  The Perry Mason series consists of over 80 novels and is currently the number 3 all-time best-selling fiction series, following only “Harry Potter” and R.L. Stine’s “Goosebumps”.  I thought it about time I sampled one.

Before reading this book, I knew very little about Perry Mason and have never seen the TV series starring Raymond Burr.  As an attorney who takes on clients in trouble, he works diligently to gather all relevant facts using his own considerable powers of observation and intellect as well as hiring private detective Paul Drake to work on his behalf.  While later books will include dramatic courtroom scenes, this first book does not but instead follows a more traditional detective novel format, albeit with some nice plot twists thrown in.

To be honest, I was somewhat surprised at the character of Perry Mason.  He has no qualms about bending and even breaking the law as long as it leads to helping his client.  He will lie about what evidence he has in order to trick somebody into revealing more than they should.  He will intercept personal mail and even a legal summons, read it and then use it to trap people into confessions.  In fact, a large part of his technique, at least in this first novel, is to set up elaborate false situations to trick people into telling him what they know. But because he is a lawyer, he knows just what he can get away with and he deftly pulls out the legal buzz words to impress the right people at the right time.

Overall, I enjoyed this book even more than I thought I would. The plot was nicely complex with several surprising twists, but it was fairly easy to keep track of who’s who and follow Perry’s thought process as he went.  Looking forward to reading more of this series as well as sampling Gardner's other work.

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