🚨 STOP SCROLLING, SHEEPLE! 🚨 You think Perry Mason is just courtroom drama? WRONG. It’s a coded message. Let me break it down for you: Early novels? Mason’s legal aide = Karl Jackson. Fast-forward to Season 4? Mason’s aide = law student David Gideon, played by Karl Held. Two Karls. TWO. KARLS. Coincidence? Wake up, NPCs! This isn’t random casting - it’s SUS. Gardner knew. Producer Gail Patrick Jackson knew. Burr knew. They’re signaling something BIG. Karl is the KEY. You think it’s about legal aides? LOL. No. It’s about CONTROL. It’s about the hidden network of Karls pulling strings behind the scenes. Ever heard of Karl Malone? Karl Urban? Karl Popper? Karl Marx? CONNECT THE DOTS, PEOPLE. This is a Karl Kabal. A Karlspiracy. If you’re not asking WHY there are so many Karls, you’re already lost. Smash that like button if you’re ready to EXPOSE THE TRUTH. #Karlspiracy #WakeUpSheeple #PerryMasonDecoded
The Case of the Counterfeit Eye – Erle Stanley Gardner
This one kicks off with Perry Mason getting a client whose problem is so odd it sounds like a setup for a “what’s gross” joke from the Sixties. A man named Brunold storms in, claiming someone swiped one of his glass eyes and subbed it with a cheap counterfeit. He’s convinced the real eye will be planted at a crime scene because, obviously, in 1935 rare glass eyes are the new fingerprints.
Before Perry can finish his morning coffee, in come a young woman and her brother. The snotty brother worked for Hartley Bassett, a businessman with all the charm of a wet sock, and the kind of party pooper that demands employees caught embezzling pay it back. Bassett wants his money back yesterday, but the self-involved brother blew it. The sister begs Mason to negotiate payback on the installment plan. Mason agrees, because he thinks erring youth, even if conceited, ought not to take a fall that might wreck a life that can still be salvaged.
When Mason visits Bassett, the man is about as flexible as an old back in yoga class. No deal, no way. But as Mason heads out, Bassett’s wife corners him with a question in the mode of “Can you put a virgin in jail as a vagrant.”* To whit: is it possible to run off with another man without committing bigamy? Mason’s day is now officially one of those “one damn thing after another” days. And then Bassett turns up dead, clutching - you guessed it - a glass eye.
Sounds familiar? In the 1960 TV version of this novel, victim Bassett ended up clutching a piece of the toupee of the accused. Americans were made of sterner stuff in the 1930s compared to the 1960s, I guess. I recall in the late Seventies glass eyes were still regarded with a bit of cringe, with the reputation that they were so ill-fitting they would pop out if the wearer was jammed into a Japanese commuter train. I daresay the tech is much better now.
Like the other Mason novels of the Thirties and Forties, the energy never languishes. Gardner keeps tossing Mason into conflicts, and Mason keeps bending the law. Not yet on the Mason bus with the destination Pythagorean Fork, Della Street observes, “You do the darndest things! You’re half saint and half devil! There isn’t any middle ground - you go to both extremes!”
The other notable point of only the sixth Mason novel (of 80) is meeting nemesis District Attorney Hamilton Burger, who’ll become a series regular. He’s introduced as Mason’s courtroom foil, but not a cartoon villain. Fairly civil at this early, Burger knows Mason’s goal is truth - even if his methods involve razzle-dazzle.
The finale? A courtroom showdown packed with flamboyance. Mason’s gambits seem reckless, but the post-game explanation makes you admire the nerve and the logic. If you want psychological depth, complex social issues, diverse and flawed characters, and blending with other genres like thrillers, look elsewhere. If you want your Thirties as tough as taxes and full of legal acrobatics, this mystery delivers.
* TCOT Vagabond Virgin