Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

EP2506: Man From Homicide: The Wee Willie Barnes Case

Dan Duryea

Lieutenant Dana investigates the murder of a hood who was about to testify before the crime commission.

Original Air Date: August 20, 1951

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EP2505: Mister Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons: The Case of the Strange Display

So lost, I'm fading

photo credit: Greyframe So lost, I’m fading viaphotopin (license)

A hated window dresser is found murdered in his own display. The fiancée of the prime suspect asks Keen to bring him home.

Original Air Date: March 16, 1944

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EP2504s: The Bob Hope Show with Guest Star Jack Webb

Jack Webb

Sergeant Friday has to solve a murder while breaking in a new partner…Detective Bob Hope.

Original Air Date: February 4, 1953

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EP2504: Dragnet: The Big False Move

Jack Webb

A man has confessed to holding up a store, but Friday suspects he’s not telling the truth.

Original Air Date: May 10, 1953

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Audio Drama Review: The Master of Blackstone Grange

Big Finish’s latest Sherlock Holmes release features a three-hour Sherlock Holmes adventure and a one-hour Christmas special.

In the titular Master of Blackstone Grange, Holmes is bored by the lack of a challenge now that Professor Moriarty is gone. However, Watson’s barber is distraught because of some strange problem he’s having with his wife. Watson sees this as a case that can get Holmes out of his doldrums. While Holmes is initially interested, that interest wanes when Moriarty’s henchman, Colonel Sebastian Moran is released from prison. This leaves Holmes unavailable when their client heads to the home of the country’s newest multi-millionaire, Honest Jim Sheedy. However, the barber has plenty of company as all the country’s great men are coming together at Blackstone Grange. But why?

The plot of this story borrows a lot from other Doyle work. The story pays homage to both The Valley of Fear and Hound of the Baskervilles. Yet, this doesn’t stop the story from having its own original plot and mystery but helps to set up the story and give it a sense of authenticity.

The performances are solid as usual. Nicholas Briggs is a very good audio Holmes, able to adjust his performance to capture different aspects and eras in Holmes life. Here, he manages to play mostly to Holmes’ melancholy and do so quite skillfully. Richard Earl is the consummate Watson, and in this story, we get to see a little of the widowed Watson. The rest of the cast is very competent, but Harry Peacock deserves special praise for his performance as one of the villains, Honest Jim Sheedy. Peacock is able to play Sheedy alternately as charming and menacing in ways that are equally convincing.

In The Fleet Street Transparency, Sherlock Holmes gets a mystery at Christmastime of a columnist who complains about his columns being edited before they appear in the paper. He doesn’t want to take the case at first but relents out of curiosity when a thug is hired to threaten him into doing it.

This is not a great Holmes story but it is pretty good. The solution doesn’t tax Holmes’ brainpower much, but it has a unique ending. What does make it worth listening to is the general authenticity of the script. There are moments that feel positively like it’s out of canon. A couple moments take you out of that, such as Holmes and Watson passing judgment on their client’s political views. However, it maintains authenticity far more often than not. Briggs and Earl turn in another solid performance. The story is sure to be a fun Christmas listen.

Both stories feature superb music by Jamie Robertson which captures both the feel of the era and the respective seasons.

Overall, this is another solid box set from Big Finish.

Rating: 4.25 out of 5

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EP2503: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Perilous Padre Matter

Mandel Kramer

Johnny is called to a small island off the coast of Corpus Christi by an insurance agent to look for a lost treasure and something he’d let Johnny know when he arrived. When Johnny arrives, he finds the insurance agent gone missing.

Original Air Date: August 6, 1961

When making your travel plans, remember http://johnnydollarair.com

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EP2502: Boston Blackie: The Joe Adams Drowning Murder

Richard Kollmar

A body is found in the sea lions’ pool at the zoo.

Original Air Date: May 14, 1947

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EP2501: Rocky Jordan: Count Me Out

Dan Duryea

Rocky goes to see a dancer whose drawing patrons away from the Café Tambourine and she asks Rocky to protect her.

Original Air Date: November 7, 1948

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EP2500: Man from Homicide: The Drowned Girl case

Dan Duryea

The body of a young woman is dragged from the river and a policeman said he saw her jump in, but Lieutenant Dana doesn’t believe it was suicide.

Original Air Date: August 6, 1951

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EP2499: Mister Keen, Tracer of Lost Person: The Case of Murder in the Air

So lost, I'm fading

photo credit: Greyframe So lost, I’m fading viaphotopin (license)

A woman comes to Mr. Keen because she’s afraid someone’s trying to kill her.

Original Air Date: February 24, 1948

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Book Review: Tracer of Lost Persons

So lost, I'm fading

photo credit: Greyframe So lost, I’m fading viaphotopin (license)

Tracer of Lost Persons by Robert W. Chambers is a 1906 book that was oft-sighted in the show’s introduction as a bit of a masterwork of detective fiction in the introduction to the 1937-55 radio series Mister Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons and as a basis for the series.

The book does provide some basic foundation for the character in the radio series. Its hero is Mister Keen and he does run a bureau that finds lost persons. The character exudes the type of warmth and kindness that defined Mister Keen in his early years.

However, there are many differences. Unlike in the radio series, Mister Keen does have a first name in the book(Westrel.) Mister Keen does charge fees in the book, although those are occasionally foregone. Like his radio counterpart, he has become quite wealthy through his efforts.

The cases Mister Keen takes in books are different. According to Jim Cox’s book on Mister Keen, the radio version of Mister Keen began by taking on cases of legitimately lost persons from his earliest days before moving on to investigating cold-blooded killings in his later years. While there are indications Mr. Keen does take more typical missing person cases, all of the cases in this book involve helping his clients finding love.

The book is a braided novel, telling connected stories about Mister Keen’s investigations. Truth be told, at least two of these cases don’t involve a search for an actual missing person, but rather a male client presents his ideal woman and expects Mister Keen to find her. In the first story, the client does so without telling Mister Keen what he’s doing and in the final story, the client does so explicitly.

Keen is resourceful and a retired Egyptologist (because it was convenient for the plot) who cracks ciphers when he gets into actual mysteries.

The plots are light and occasionally take turns for the absurd. For example, one story ends with a body that’s been in suspended animation for thousands of years being revived so she can be Keen’s client’s wife. In another story, a female doctor dedicates her life to the study of a disease where only one person has been diagnosed with it, which turns into a plot point because the disease is actually a hoax.

Yet, this is some forgivable as Tracer of Lost Persons doesn’t take itself all that seriously. It’s a light and fluffy read featuring a kindly investigator with the romantic soul who plays Cupid. It’s the type of book you want to read if you’re in a mood to not think much. It’s an interesting curiosity that features a few fun moments and provides a little insight into the origin of one of radio’s longest-running characters.

Rating: 3 out of 5

Tracer of Lost Persons is in the public domain and can be read for free at Project Gutenberg.

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EP2498: Dragnet: The Big Joke

Jack Webb

A bartender calls Friday and Smith when he receives a letter offering him $5,000 to kill a man.

Original Air Date: May 10, 1953

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EP2497: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Philadelphia Miss Matter

Mandel Kramer

An insurance agent asks if Johnny has top secret clearance and then summons him to Mississippi.

Original Air Date: July 30, 1961

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EP2496: Boston Blackie: The Hilda Petersen Murder

Richard Kollmar

Mary calls in Blackie because her next door neighbor believes her husband is going to kill her.

Original Air Date: May 7, 1947

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EP2495: Rocky Jordan: The Bartered Bridegroom

Jack Moyles

A very tall woman walks into Rocky’s cafĂ© and informs him that he’s going to marry her for $5,000.

Original Air Date: October 31, 1948

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