A little bit about what you'll find reviewed here
Who I am:
Saturday, March 19, 2022
Torn Sails - Allen Raine
Thursday, March 17, 2022
Eagles of the RAF - Philip D. Caine
Monday, March 14, 2022
The Brown Mask - Percy James Brebner
Friday, March 11, 2022
Samurai! - Saburo Sakai
Monday, March 7, 2022
I Am Legend - Richard Matheson
Sunday, March 6, 2022
The Scarlet and the Black - J.P. Gallagher
Friday, March 4, 2022
The Silver Blade - Charles E. Walk
I picked this one out on my own. I have a few pages of titles, and I hadn't read any books off this page yet.
A man falls into a room with a dagger sticking out of his neck. There are plenty of people in the office building where the murder occurs, but no one seems to be the culprit. Detective Converse has his own methods of getting to the truth, and it's going to take all of them to solve this mystery.
This story was a basic whodunit, and it brought something to my attention that is starting to annoy me about these older books. This is the third or fourth book that I've read in the recent past where one of the women succumbs to some sort of "brain fever" and is useless for a huge chunk of the book. One of the other female characters is a bit stronger, so that's a mark in this book's favor. I wondered if it was due to the male outlook at the time, but one of the books I'm referring to was written by a woman, so who knows?
This book also has a fair bit of racist language in it that seems to be common at the time. It's not on every page or anything, but just so you know, it's in there.
Overall, this was a decent mystery. It wasn't bad, and it wasn't fantastic. I didn't feel like I was getting clues along with the detective that would help me solve the crime. There are little things here and there, but I wouldn't rank it as highly as some of the others I've read recently.