Note: For nine novels, Doug Selby is the DA Gardner threw into Madison County, California to slug it out with the sleaze, the hacks, the lawyers who think ethics means coercion should be used only when necessary. He’s human, yeah, but relentless, like justice on too much coffee from South Sulawesi.
The DA Calls It Murder – Erle Stanley Gardner
Doug Selby’s first outing as Madison County’s new district attorney starts with a bang - literally, a corpse in a hotel room. He and Sheriff Max Brandon, his election-day partner-in-crime-fighting, are still riding the high of victory when the call comes in. Madison City sits a hundred miles north of Hollywood, but the trouble Selby’s about to wade into has Tinseltown fingerprints all over it.
Max is the kind of straight-shooting lawman you’d expect to see in a pulp Western, loyal to the bone. Sylvia Martin, Selby’s girlfriend, is no shrinking violet either - smart, quick, and ready to dive into the mess. She’s the kind of woman who knows when to hold your hand and when to frog-march you toward the truth.
The dead man isn’t the only mystery. There’s an envelope fat with five grand, a lawsuit snarled around an estate, and a movie script so overwrought it’s Gardner doing parody - Lest Ye Be Judged. Toss in a poisoned German Shepherd (don’t worry, the dog pulls through) and a camera that’s cutting-edge for 1937, and you’ve got Gardner’s signature: a plot that twists and cool technology.
Hollywood glamour slinks into the picture in the form of Shirley Arden, a star with more brains than her studio gives her credit for. Like John O'Hara did with his shabby glamorous characters, Gardner lets her speak with a candor that slices through the hype. Heaven knows, Gardner liked his short digression but this monologue on fame and privacy is unique in the canon.
[Fans]'re like telegraph poles whizzing by when you're traveling on a Pullman train, if you know what I mean. They tell me things about themselves and I smile at them sympathetically and work my eyes; but all the time I'm thinking about my last income tax return, how long I'm apt to be working on this present picture, whether the director is going to listen to what I have to say about the way I should say "Farewell" to my lover or whether he's going to insist on doing it according to some standards which don't register with me. I give my fan my autograph and turn loose my best smile on him. I know I'm never going to see him again and he's in sort of a daze anyway which he's conjured up to wrap around me as an aura.
Selby nearly gets hypnotized by her - literally - and their verbal sparring has the smoky tension of an Ida Lupino - Ronald Colman scene.
The novel’s heartbeat, though, comes in a quiet room where Selby and Sylvia break the news to Mrs. Larrabie, the widow of the murdered man. Gardner drops the hard-boiled mask for a moment and shows us something rare: women carrying each other through grief. Sylvia steps up, comforting a stranger until her own composure cracks and in a twist of human grace, the widow consoles her. It’s a scene where Gardner tries to do something out of his lane. It works, I think, but I'm as easy-goingly uncritical a reader as you'll find anywhere.
The D.A. Calls It Murder is a puzzle box of subplots and clues. It is also Gardner doing something different, perhaps to test himself, peeling back the gloss of Hollywood and the grit of small-town realities to show us what ambition and compassion look like when the stakes are high.