The odor of violets

by Baynard Kendrick

Paperback, 1941

DDC/MDS

813.54

Publication

Boston : Little, Brown and company, 1941.

Original publication date

1941

Description

In the early days of WWII, a blind detective follows unseen clues to solve a murder and undermine a German spy plot. Meet Captain Duncan Maclain. Blinded during his service in the first World War, Maclain made up for his lack of vision by sharpening his other senses, achieving a mastery of the subtle unseen clues often missed by those who see only with their eyes. Aided by his dogs Schnucke and Driest, the Captain puts the intelligence-gathering techniques he learned in the Army to work, making a name for himself as New York City's most sought-after private detective. Now it's 1940, there's a second World War breaking out, and Maclain is pulled into a case unlike any he's investigated before.  The murder of an actor in his Greenwich Village apartment would cause a stir no matter the circumstances but, when the actor happens to possess secret government plans, and when those plans go missing along with the young woman with whom he was last seen, it's sensational enough to interest not only the local police, but the American government as well.  Maclain suspects a German spy plot at work and, in a world where treasonous men and patriots are indistinguishable to the naked eye, it will take his special skills to sniff out the solution. Reissued for the first time in over a half-century, Odor of Violets is the most well-known installment in the long-running Duncan Maclain series, which featured one of crime fiction's earliest disabled detectives. The novel, filmed in 1942 as Eyes in the Night, is a classic hybrid of mystery and espionage fiction.… (more)

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Tags

Collection

User reviews

LibraryThing member amnesta
I became a fan of the pulp Duncan Maclain whodunits after seeing one of his Dell Mapbacks. I later saw that Ernest Hemingway also owned this book.
LibraryThing member BooksForDinner
This was fun. I have never heard of this golden age detective before. A little silly, of course, and over the top, but a good read nonetheless.
LibraryThing member EricaObey
Not enough to convince me I want to read any more by him.

Physical description

4 p.; 20 cm

Local notes

a pre-publication copy in wrappers with production cover art
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