[Gutenberg 4047] • The Leavenworth Case
- Authors
- Green, Anna Katharine
- Tags
- detective and mystery stories , mystery , merchants -- crimes against -- fiction , inheritance and succession -- fiction , police -- new york (state) -- new york -- fiction , sisters -- fiction , classics , lawyers -- united states -- fiction , murder -- investigation -- fiction
- Date
- 1878-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
- Size
- 0.27 MB
- Lang
- en
Horatio Leavenworth, an immensely wealthy bachelor, is a retired merchant who enjoys great social position and respect. His two orphan nieces, Mary and Eleanor live with him in a luxurious mansion in New York's upscale Fifth Avenue. One morning, he is found mysteriously dead in his study, shot neatly through the back of his head. His will, written some time earlier, is discovered, in which he has left his entire fortune to one of the nieces, while cutting out the other completely. The building, which had remained locked throughout the night, houses a number of servants besides the two young ladies. The finger of suspicion can point only to someone inside.Written nine years before the advent of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, The Leavenworth Case is little known today. However, connoisseurs of detective fiction would immediately recognize this genre reating work by an author who is now acknowledged as “the mother of detective fiction.” The book published in 1878 was the first ever American detective novel. It was a runaway bestseller and Anna Katharine Green, its thirty-two year old author, is credited with many other firsts. She was the first writer to develop the “whodunit” in its classic form. She also created the “series detective” which is a device that has been explored by countless writers of mystery novels to this day.