Knowledge (XXG)

Headed for a Hearse

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employing increasingly criminal means to keep himself financially afloat: embezzlement, murder and conspiracy to have an innocent man condemned by planting incriminating evidence. Unable to shake the testimony of Crane's witnesses and experts, Bolston is arrested and Westland is reprieved within minutes of the planned execution.
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Westland bribes the prison warden to allow his legal team to use an office there for conferences with interested parties. These include his stockbroking partners, Ronald Woodbury and Richard Bolston; his cousin Lawrence Wharton; chief clerk Amos Sprague; his former secretary Margot Brentino, and his
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The reason Westland abandons his despair so as to attempt exoneration is that Emily Lou has received a letter claiming to have evidence of his innocence. But when the two women, accompanied by the detectives, visit Petro's Restaurant to arrange a meeting with the writer, professional killers shoot
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and with only six days left to establish his innocence, he brings in criminal lawyer Charles Finklestein, who in turns engages two agency detectives from New York, William Crane and 'Doc' Williams. The evidence against Westland is that his wife's body was found shot in a locked apartment to which
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resorting to his armchair, stimulated to an exercise in pure rationality by a pipeful of tobacco, Latimer's William Crane drinks himself into sobriety, "a beautiful separation of body and mind", and then, once the details of the crime begin to fall into place, resolutely refuses any more alcohol.
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At the final hour, all the parties are assembled at the prison and Crane denounces Bolston and Emily Lou, who has secretly married Bolston and stands to inherit the bulk of Westland's fortune. Bolston had been unwilling to retrench his lifestyle even at a time of economic turndown and had been
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only he and his wife had keys, where he had been decoyed on the night of the murder by a phone call that seemed at first to have come from his fiancée, Emily Lou Martin. Additional evidence had come from neighbors beneath, who had heard a shot at the time of the killing. The weapon used was a
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Yet another murder later occurs when Sprague is run down in the street while carrying evidence that points to a possible motive to get Westland convicted. It eventually emerges that many of Mrs Westland's financial holdings had been substituted for stolen
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also on death row with Westland, they return to Petro's with thugs for protection. There they learn that Petro had mistaken them for members of a rival gang who had come to identify the slain Manny Grant for the killers.
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so as to make him suspect. Taking a taxi back and forth over the river bridges, Crane establishes where this must have taken place and hires a diver to find the weapon. Then, in a last minute dash to
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him before they can talk. On the following day there is an attempt to gun down the detectives in the street, but they recognise the men as from Petro's and, with the cooperation of a violent
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After thinking the problem over, Crane deduces that the shooting was done with a different Webley and that Westland's had been stolen by the real murderer and thrown into the
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sold on by criminals at a 90% discount. But a solution is also brought nearer when it is realised that on the night of the killing the clocks had changed for
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and the witnesses to the shot had not put forward their clock. The shooting had therefore taken place after Westland had left his wife's apartment.
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fiancée Emily Lou. These in their various ways are recruited to gather sufficient evidence for the state governor to pardon Westland.
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locates the book as a typical fiction of the 1930s, but one that straddles genres in a "successful melding of the
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and the classic drawing room mystery". It is of its time, the era of the
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of a type owned by Westland, which has now disappeared from his desk.
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Stewards of the House: The Detective Fiction of Jonathan Latimer
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in 1935. In 1937 it served as the basis for the film,
102: 89: 81: 71: 61: 51: 43: 33: 8: 19: 287:“A Screwball Tragedy”, Open Road Media 2014 25: 18: 340:The Chicago of Fiction: A Resource Guide 235: 148:In his 1990 introduction to the novel, 158:Great Depression in the United States 7: 268:from the original on March 10, 2018 14: 173:At the center of the story is a " 369:Works about capital punishment 16:1935 novel by Jonathan Latimer 1: 374:Doubleday (publisher) books 264:. American Film Institute. 400: 342:, Scarecrow Press, 2011, 24: 364:American mystery novels 122:is a murder mystery by 332:, Popular Press 1993, 108:The Lady in the Morgue 95:Murder in the Madhouse 379:Novels set in Chicago 384:The Crime Club books 359:1935 American novels 20:Headed for a Hearse 315:Brubaker 1993, p.39 306:Brubaker 1993, p.48 262:"The Westland Case" 242:Brubaker 1993, p.38 175:locked room mystery 119:Headed for a Hearse 21: 297:Kaser 2011, p.208 251:Kaser 2011, p.208 150:Max Allan Collins 137:The Westland Case 115: 114: 72:Publication place 391: 338:James A. Kaser, 316: 313: 307: 304: 298: 295: 289: 284: 278: 277: 275: 273: 258: 252: 249: 243: 240: 220:Peoria, Illinois 154:hardboiled novel 124:Jonathan Latimer 103:Followed by 90:Preceded by 85:Print (hardback) 63:Publication date 38:Jonathan Latimer 29: 22: 399: 398: 394: 393: 392: 390: 389: 388: 349: 348: 328:Bill Brubaker, 325: 320: 319: 314: 310: 305: 301: 296: 292: 285: 281: 271: 269: 260: 259: 255: 250: 246: 241: 237: 232: 209:daylight saving 171: 162:Sherlock Holmes 146: 130:as part of the 128:Doubleday Doran 82:Media type 64: 56:Doubleday Doran 17: 12: 11: 5: 397: 395: 387: 386: 381: 376: 371: 366: 361: 351: 350: 347: 346: 336: 324: 321: 318: 317: 308: 299: 290: 279: 253: 244: 234: 233: 231: 228: 184:wartime Webley 179:electric chair 170: 167: 145: 142: 113: 112: 104: 100: 99: 91: 87: 86: 83: 79: 78: 73: 69: 68: 65: 62: 59: 58: 53: 49: 48: 45: 41: 40: 35: 31: 30: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 396: 385: 382: 380: 377: 375: 372: 370: 367: 365: 362: 360: 357: 356: 354: 345: 341: 337: 335: 331: 327: 326: 322: 312: 309: 303: 300: 294: 291: 288: 283: 280: 267: 263: 257: 254: 248: 245: 239: 236: 229: 227: 223: 221: 217: 216:Chicago River 212: 210: 206: 200: 197: 191: 187: 185: 180: 176: 168: 166: 163: 159: 155: 151: 143: 141: 139: 138: 133: 129: 125: 121: 120: 111: 109: 105: 101: 98: 96: 92: 88: 84: 80: 77: 76:United States 74: 70: 67:9 August 1935 66: 60: 57: 54: 50: 46: 42: 39: 36: 32: 28: 23: 339: 329: 323:Bibliography 311: 302: 293: 282: 270:. Retrieved 256: 247: 238: 224: 213: 201: 196:labor leader 192: 188: 172: 147: 135: 118: 117: 116: 106: 93: 353:Categories 230:References 132:Crime Club 144:The novel 52:Publisher 334:pp.38-50 272:March 9, 266:Archived 44:Language 47:English 110:  97:  34:Author 344:p.208 205:scrip 274:2018 169:Plot 355:: 140:. 276:.

Index


Jonathan Latimer
Doubleday Doran
United States
Murder in the Madhouse
The Lady in the Morgue
Jonathan Latimer
Doubleday Doran
Crime Club
The Westland Case
Max Allan Collins
hardboiled novel
Great Depression in the United States
Sherlock Holmes
locked room mystery
electric chair
wartime Webley
labor leader
scrip
daylight saving
Chicago River
Peoria, Illinois
"The Westland Case"
Archived
“A Screwball Tragedy”, Open Road Media 2014
pp.38-50
p.208
Categories
1935 American novels
American mystery novels

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