The Case of the Stuttering Bishop: A Perry Mason Mystery #9 (Volume 9) (Perry Mason Mysteries, 9)
The Case of the Stuttering Bishop: A Perry Mason Mystery #9 (Volume 9) (Perry Mason Mysteries, 9) book cover

The Case of the Stuttering Bishop: A Perry Mason Mystery #9 (Volume 9) (Perry Mason Mysteries, 9)

Paperback – December 7, 2015

Price
$9.11
Format
Paperback
Pages
232
Publisher
Ankerwycke
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1634250924
Dimensions
5 x 0.85 x 7 inches
Weight
12.6 ounces

Description

Erle Stanley Gardner (1889-1970) is the master of American mystery fiction. A civil rights lawyer, his mysteries contain intricate, ever-twisting plots. Challenging and full of surprises, these are whodunits in the best tradition. He wrote 146 books, 85 of which feature Perry Mason. The fictional attorney became the basis of a number of television series (reputedly 271 episodes), and achieved an enviable record for winning his cases. Erle Stanley Gardner has an amazing sales record: at the height of his popularity in the mid-1960s he was selling an average of 26,000 copies of his novels a day, making him one of the world's best selling author's, easily outstripping at the time Agatha Christie and Barbara Cartland combined. Born in Malden, Massachusetts, Gardner went on to attend Law School in Indiana, but this only lasted for around a month, being suspended because of various distractions to his studies, especially boxing. He moved to California and became a self-taught attorney before opening his own law office. However, being bored with this he ended up working in sales for five years. Returning to the law in 1921, he created another law firm, but again was not really enthusiastic, other than when acting as a trial lawyer. Writing was his great passion and eventually he gave up the law completely to pursue a full time writing career. In this he was prodigious, setting himself a target of 66,000 words per week. His output under various pseudonyms, as well as his own, went wider than Perry Mason and also extended to non-fiction. He became an expert on the early Mexican exploitation of California. In later life, law did play a significant part in his life once again. With friends, he set up what they termed 'The Court of Last Resort', aimed at investigating and attempting to reverse what they perceived as miscarriages of justice because of poor legal representation, or evidential problems. Gardner himself once wrote: 'I want to make my hero a fighter, not by having him be ruthless to women and underlings, but by creating a character who, with infinite patience jockeys his enemies into a position where he can deliver one good knockout punch.'

Features & Highlights

  • Criminal lawyer and bestselling mystery author Erle Stanley Gardner wrote nearly 150 novels that have sold 300 million copies worldwide. Now, the American Bar Association is bringing back his most famous and enduring novels―featuring criminal defense lawyer and sleuth Perry Mason―in striking trade paperback editions. Julia Branner was forced by her millionaire father-in-law to give up her baby for adoption. When a young woman surfaces years later claiming to be Julia's daughter, Julia insists she's a fraud after the family fortune, and enlists Bishop William Mallory to help expose the imposter. When Julia's father-in-law is found dead and Julia charged with his murder, the bishop promises to help―but is a bishop who's delivered many sermons likely to stutter?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(355)
★★★★
25%
(148)
★★★
15%
(89)
★★
7%
(41)
-7%
(-42)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Nice, solid, fairly early Perry Mason!

I just love Perry Mason and this is a pretty good one from close to the beginning of the series..

Gardner was still forming the Mason character and all the other supporting ones as well. The story has quite a few twists and turns but then the good Perry Mason ones always do. Characters are little too one dimensional but then Mason stories are always like that to some degree.

I would rate this a 8.5 to 9.0 out of 10. One last comment - I think it's a little sad that the publisher felt it was needed to point out this book was written in a different era and that there might be some verbiage that might offend readers.
4 people found this helpful
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A good, solid Perry Mason book, but not the best

On consideration, this is not a bad book at all. It has all the usual action / red-herrings and startling outcome at the end, and yet it did not leave a lasting impression.

Possibly, because I recently re-read 2 of my favourite Mason-books - The Case of the Lucky Loser & The Case of the Angry Mourner - and it seems less intriguing in comparison.

Interestingly enough, district attorney Hamilton Burger (first introduced to the series in book #6) is not too antagonistic and belligerent towards Mason, he only turns into his arch nemesis later in the series (this is only book #9). Here he is polite and almost "friendly", giving the case against Mason's client the benefit of the doubt and it is not even him who represents the prosecution in the trial. Maybe this is what I am missing.