The 12th novel down my "journey into time" (started in 2015) to discover old treasures like the Perry Mason Series, is, once again, a complete page-turner.
Usually, most Perry Mason books have his secretary, Della Street, looking over black-eyed blondes, dangerous dowagers, and haunted husbands looking pacing the reception area, selecting one and then escorting them into Mason’s inner sanctum with a jaunty, “Got a client for you, Chief!” But in this 12th adventure, The Case Of The Substitute Face, things begin a little differently.
Here we find Mason and Della returning from a trip through China and Japan where Perry was studying the police methods of the Far East, after which the pair decided to make a jaunt to the island paradise of Hawaii on their way home. One of his fellow passengers, Mrs. Newberry, approaches Mason and asks him to look into some trouble involving her husband Carl. Until recently, the man was the bookkeeper for the Products Refining Company and spent his days grumbling about not having the money to give his beloved stepdaughter Belle all the advantages she deserved. But then, he “won the lottery,” quit his job, changed his name and his wife’s name from Moar to Newberry (the surname of Belle’s late father) and started moving the family around the country, ending up in Hawaii for six weeks. Nothing suspicious there, right? It looks like Carl Newberry’s plan has worked because Belle has recently attracted the attention of wealthy socialite Roy Hungerford, who is starting to ignore his girlfriend, the “rich and ruthless” Celinda Dail, who is also on the ship with her father, Charles Whitmore Dail. And Dail happens to be the the president of the Products Refining Company! Is it any wonder that, for some reason, Carl Newberry doesn’t want to leave his cabin? Or why Mrs. Newberry is so worried? And her fears are compounded because somebody has stolen a framed picture of Belle and substituted it with that of a famous Hollywood starlet whom Belle closely resembles.
Mason is asked to serve as an intermediary between the Newberrys and the Products Refining Company. If Carl has embezzled funds, as his wife fears, she hopes that a deal can be struck where Carl will return most of the money in exchange for avoiding prosecution. The lawyer agrees to take the case, provided he never meets Carl Newberry and makes it clear that he is not representing the man but aiding his daughter, to whom Della Street, who happens to be Belle’s roommate aboard ship, has taken a shine. But before negotiations can be satisfactorily completed, a storm breaks out at sea, and a man goes overboard. By the time the ship docks in San Francisco, Mrs. Newberry has been charged with her husband’s murder.
This is a cracking good read, and Mason is in high form in terms of the tricky games he plays in his practice of the law. Mason pulls some amazing stuff in this novel in his efforts to prove that certain witnesses have been corrupted, by their own guilt or by vanity, and to figure out what happened aboard ship on that stormy night. Paul Drake provides as much comic relief as support as he rails against being dragged into situations that threaten his continued employment. But the main play here is Miss Della Street, whose closeness to Mason has never been more apparent and whose loyalty to her “chief” threatens to turn her from the ace attorney’s greatest asset to a liability. This book delighted me with its combination of legal legerdemain, classic clueing, and noirish suspense. There’s a terrific gangster in this one!
One of the most enjoyable elements of these books is just how well they work as puzzles, too, with Gardner stringing together a variety of approaches — frank hunches, cavilling over medical evidence, and modern wonders like ultra-violet and infra-red photography to allow the acquisition of evidence — that all combine to wind the plot noose tighter. There is always that one piece of misdirection there that’s breath-takingly simple, and yet there are so many other irons in the fire that I’m willing to bet a lot of readers will only realise its significance when Mason points it out in the final summary. And the scheme itself is freaking ingenious, easily one of the most superbly-handled reversals from this era, able to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the very best of the genre. There is just something so awesome about a man who is willing to bend the rules a little (sometimes a lot) to serve the interests of his clients and prove them innocent of all wrongdoings. He is at his best in this one.
The Case Of The Substitute Face is light, fast, very clever, delightfully complex, full of great writing and authorly ingenuity. Perry, as usual skates dangerously inside and outside the boundaries of proper judicial behaviour, and just barely. It’s a complicated case, with all these ingredients in it. The moral of the tale is to keep an eye on Perry every single instant. He has rabbits in a hat he can pull out at any time, and he brings his own hat.
Perry Mason is a man who enjoys his work. He likes his cases but the real pleasure for him lies in pitting his wits against criminals, against the police and against the DA. The joy he takes in this is communicated to the reader and helps make each Perry Mason novel just so much fun. Perry Mason is referred as a "Wizard Of The Court Room", more a sleuth than a lawyer, who uses the fold of the legal system to hunt for the truth, takes calculated risks AND utilizes his devious mind to uncover pure evidence that would solve the case. Mr. Gardner continues to follow the KISS rule. 256 pages are all you get to race through this riveting story. Till the very end you will keep gasping "What is Perry Mason up to?" You will, once again, let go of your sleep to get to the bottom of things.
Perry Mason, a character created in 1930s, can easily be a part of 2023 and the author would need to change NOTHING (not even a word) to adjust to the advanced world since 1930s. Now, THAT, for sure is what is evergreen. The story telling has the same intensity now as it did then. This episode continues to be a fine example of American Literature from the yesteryears. No wonder Gardner was one of the best-selling writers of all times, and certainly one of the best-selling mystery authors ever. There are a total of 82 novels (which I now fortunately own in my shelves). It's a treasure cove indeed!!