Note: Fifth Mason book, 1934. Early Mason plants fake evidence just to mess with the D.A. - a stunt he’d never pull later. Gardner also trots out multiple characters to recap the facts, giving magazine serial readers the “just-the-facts-ma’am” tour straight to the culprit, if they are paying attention over weeks.
The Case of the Curious Bride – Erle Stanley Gardner
A woman walks in the office, says she’s not a bride, but her manner says otherwise. Perry smells a rat. Della Street - secretary, oracle - knows the score: lady’s married, lady’s lying. After trying out some half-truths about a friend's problem, she flees the interview. Mason is philosophical if contrite:
What right have I got to sit back with that ‘holier than thou’ attitude and expect them to come clean with a total stranger? They come here when they’re in trouble. They’re worried and frightened. They come to me for consultations. I’m a total stranger to them. They need help. Poor fools, you can’t blame them for resorting to subterfuges. I could have been sympathetic and drawn her out, won her confidence, found out her secret and lightened the load of her troubles. But I got impatient with her. I tried to force the issue, and now she’s gone.
The setup: husband presumed dead in a plane crash pops up alive. The “friend” story collapses under its own weight. Then the dominoes fall - murder charge, cops snarling, DA readying the rope. All the evidence points one way: guilty.
Perry’s job? Cheat the hangman. He does it with tricks, fake evidence, and legwork he mostly undertakes himself.
Tone? Hard as nails. Depression-era funk seeps through the cracks. Millionaire in the mix, ethics of an alley cat. Public hated fat cats in 1934, and Gardner milks it. Near the end Mason mutters that the victim “needed killing.” Whoa. Highly unusual for Gardner’s moral compass to spin like a busted fan. Not like him. Sure, the dead guy was a con man, fleeced lonely women, but still - lawyer shrugging off murder? Mason never colder.
Plot mechanics: intricate as a Rube Goldberg mousetrap. Gardner cheats? Nope. He plays fair - repeats the facts like a broken jukebox so you can’t whine later. Why the repetition? Serialization in Liberty Magazine. New readers parachuting in every week. Gardner, ever a professional, says “Readers first” and spoon-feeds them, not following Wilkie Collins's dictum; "Make 'em laugh, make 'em cry, make 'em wait."
Trial scene? Short. Early Mason books didn’t always climax in court. This one’s more about the chase, the feints, the sucker punches. And the atmosphere - antique, pre-war, no sex despite the wink in the title..
Did I guess the killer? Nope. Gardner blindsided me. That’s the fun. You think you’re smart, then wham - you’re not.
Brass tacks: TCOT Curious Bride is a good read, not great. It’s got grit, speed, and a whiff of moral rot, courtesy of the Dirty Thirties. If you want Perry pure and prime, maybe try later stuff. But if you dig the smell of old money and older lies, this early one will do.