

Erles Stanley Gardner is best known for his courtroom dramas featuring lawyer Perry Mason (82 novels in the series).. Gardner’s also known for his Donald Lam/Bertha Cool series (30 books) of unconventional private eye novels.
The Clue of the Runaway Blonde (1947) introduces Sheriff Bill Edon, a lawman pushing 70 with politicians poised to attack him if he doesn’t solve a murder and untangle the mystery of a wealthy businessman’s estate. GRADE: B
The Clue of the Hungry Horse (1947) begins with a death of a young woman in a stable, seemingly killed by a kick from a horse. But Sheriff Bill Edon, still dogged by politicians who think he is “out of touch” with contemporary investigative procedures, finds the evidence to prove the woman was murdered. But why? GRADE: B+
The Clue of the Screaming Woman (1949) was “lost” for 30 years. The story was originally serialized in Country Gentleman magazine, issues January through April 1949, and never reprinted until Ellery Queen’s Secrets of Mystery volume published it in 1979. A man is shot during a hunting excursion by a group of wealth people. Sheriff Bill Eldon doubts that Frank Ames, a World War II veteran, is the culprit even though the dead man was shot with Ames’s gun.
Once again, Sheriff Bill Eldon finds himself mocked and underestimated as he investigates the murder. Erle Stanley Gardner includes a love story along with a fascinating mystery.
If you’re looking for solid detection and puzzle solving, I recommend the Sheriff Bill Eldon series to you. While not as popular as Perry Mason and Lam/Cool, the Eldon series delivers plenty of entertaining fun! I rate The Clue of the Screaming Woman a B+. Some small press should collect all three of these stories in one volume. Are you an Erle Stanley Gardner fan?











