Miss Pinkerton
-
- 3,99 €
-
- 3,99 €
Publisher Description
'A literary celebrity with few rivals ... she wrote more bestselling novels ... over a longer period than almost any other American writer' WASHINGTON POST
Everyone agrees that Herbert Wynne wasn't the type to commit suicide. But he has been found, shot dead, the only other possible killer his bedridden aunt.
Inspector Patton of the Homicide Division sees this as the perfect opportunity to send in Hilda Adams, a nurse with a very special talent for detection. But when the sleuthing nurse arrives at the mansion, she finds more intrigue than anyone outside could possibly have imagined - and a killer on the loose...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
First published in 1932, this clever entry in the American Mystery Classics series from Rinehart (1876 1958) introduces Hilda Adams, a nurse who uses her professional status to aid the police in an unnamed city that could be New York. The self-effacing lead doesn't claim to be a detective, despite the Miss Pinkerton moniker bestowed on her by Inspector Patton; rather, she believes she just has "eyes to use and the chance to use them where the police could not." Patton sends Miss Adams to the home of one of the city's leading families, the Mitchells, where she finds distraught elderly Juliet Mitchell in need of nursing care and Juliet's 24-year-old nephew, Herbert Wynne, dead from a gunshot. Miss Adams rejects the family doctor's opinion that Wynne killed himself, and uses her role as Juliet's nurse to gather more evidence. Readers should be prepared for some dated passages ("Like all women, I feel safer with a light," Miss Adams says). Overall, this is an entertaining puzzle mystery that stands the test of time.