I had intended to reread Helen Reilly's The Silver Leopard for an entry in my Super Book Password Challenge. But the book is packed away and I don't feel much like sorting through boxes. So...since I need the book as a clue, I'll give you all the write up from when I read it originally...
Reilly's
career reached from 1930-1962. She was one of the first authors to
feature police procedure in her work and she based her novels on
research she had done on the New York homicide squad. Inspector Christopher
McKee is her central detective and she shows him at work with a full
complement of supporting officers--from fingerprint men to detectives
ordered to shadow suspects. The Silver Leopard leans a little more towards the suspenseful Had I But Known school of her later works, but McKee still has a major role.
In
this mystery Inspector McKee faces a knotty problem involving the
members and friends of one of New York's oldest and most prosperous
families. They are all privileged, suave, and used to getting
their own way. At the center is Catherine Lister whose uncle passed
away several years ago, but who still has ties to her Aunt and two
cousins. Aunt Angela announces
that she plans to remarry--her intended is an old family friend, the
famous portrait painter Michael Nye. Catherine is then summoned to
Nye's studio where she walks into a situation destined to make her the
prime suspect in Nye's murder. The door is on the latch and there is a
trail of clues leading straight to her and the silver leopard statue
that Catherine's uncle had sent to her just before his death. When
McKee becomes involved, his investigation will lead from downtown NYC to
an old, run-down country inn and a lonely house in another state. The
District Attorney begins to pressure him to arrest Catherine, and McKee
has to walk the tightrope between keeping the girl's freedom and
protecting her from the danger of her own death.
There is a lot
of suspense in this one...and a definite atmosphere intended to imply
that if Catherine had just paid attention to a few details then she
might have known that someone would be desperate enough to at least
frame her for murder if not murder her as well. But this is all nicely
balanced with the clear, well written police procedure scenes with
McKee. McKee follows the book, but also allows his compassion and
humanity to see through to the real culprit.
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