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A tale of two sisters, family fortune, and murder. Beautiful Sylvia Bain Atwood is overseeing her ailing father's estate while her sister serves as his caregiver. But their father's fortune has shadowy roots-and now one of his creditors is blackmailing the family. When the situation escalates to murder, defense lawyer Perry Mason will have his hands full in this mystery in Edgar Award-winning author Erle Stanley Gardner's classic, long-running series, which has sold three hundred million show more copies and serves as the inspiration for the HBO show starring Matthew Rhys and Tatiana Maslany. show lessTags
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“She’s too busy stealing her sister’s boyfriend.” - Della Street
“No, she’s just giving her sex appeal its morning exercise.” - Perry Mason
The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister is one of Erle Stanley Gardner’s Perry Mason novels written in the 1950s, when Gardner was at his zenith in the famous series. This one is surprisingly breezy, in spite of the usual complicated plot involving blackmail and eventually, murder, and a rather lengthy courtroom scene.
It begins like a horse jumping from the starting gate when Della makes certain Perry knows she doesn’t like the green-eyed client waiting to see him. Her name is Sylvia Bain Atwood, and she’s trying to get out of some tricky business being run by a guy named Brogan, that show more Paul Drake believes is a shady but smart blackmailer. The backstory involves whether the money that her ailing father used to get rich — there’s a lot of money involved — came from an old robbery. Sylvia doesn’t want that, because it could void all that money she and her more subdued sister, Hattie, and her brother will inherit.
Sylvia thinks she’s smarter than Mason, and it jams up the works! Her efforts to stay ahead of the blackmailer — and Mason — muddy things up at every turn. With Della in tow, Mason walks in on a murder scene he’s been set up to find, and has a very disagreeable Sgt. Holcomb looking to catch Perry on the other side of the line he’s always skirting. Tragg lends Mason a hand in this one, tipping him off at one point! But Mason’s not the only one in a jam, because when the father kicks off, the green-eyed sister’s schemes cause Hattie to be charged with murder.
This is really an excellent entry in the series, very enjoyable. Even a protracted courtroom questioning doesn't slow this one down enough to mar it significantly. An ice pick, some very tricky business with the blackmail tape everyone wants, and some even trickier business regarding time of death make this one zip along nicely. Even the lengthy questioning in court of witnesses is involving rather than tedious, and this case has one of the most unusual endings of the entire series.
Will Perry let someone fry for a crime they didn’t commit? Will the green-eyed sister get the last laugh? You’ll have to read it to find out. A good one! show less
“No, she’s just giving her sex appeal its morning exercise.” - Perry Mason
The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister is one of Erle Stanley Gardner’s Perry Mason novels written in the 1950s, when Gardner was at his zenith in the famous series. This one is surprisingly breezy, in spite of the usual complicated plot involving blackmail and eventually, murder, and a rather lengthy courtroom scene.
It begins like a horse jumping from the starting gate when Della makes certain Perry knows she doesn’t like the green-eyed client waiting to see him. Her name is Sylvia Bain Atwood, and she’s trying to get out of some tricky business being run by a guy named Brogan, that show more Paul Drake believes is a shady but smart blackmailer. The backstory involves whether the money that her ailing father used to get rich — there’s a lot of money involved — came from an old robbery. Sylvia doesn’t want that, because it could void all that money she and her more subdued sister, Hattie, and her brother will inherit.
Sylvia thinks she’s smarter than Mason, and it jams up the works! Her efforts to stay ahead of the blackmailer — and Mason — muddy things up at every turn. With Della in tow, Mason walks in on a murder scene he’s been set up to find, and has a very disagreeable Sgt. Holcomb looking to catch Perry on the other side of the line he’s always skirting. Tragg lends Mason a hand in this one, tipping him off at one point! But Mason’s not the only one in a jam, because when the father kicks off, the green-eyed sister’s schemes cause Hattie to be charged with murder.
This is really an excellent entry in the series, very enjoyable. Even a protracted courtroom questioning doesn't slow this one down enough to mar it significantly. An ice pick, some very tricky business with the blackmail tape everyone wants, and some even trickier business regarding time of death make this one zip along nicely. Even the lengthy questioning in court of witnesses is involving rather than tedious, and this case has one of the most unusual endings of the entire series.
Will Perry let someone fry for a crime they didn’t commit? Will the green-eyed sister get the last laugh? You’ll have to read it to find out. A good one! show less
The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister (P. Mason #42) (1953) by Erle Stanley Gardner. This is just another brilliant celebration of Mr. Gardner’s most famous characters. Although more than 70 years old the stories written by the “King of Mysteries” still fascinate and give the reader a serious mystery that they have the opportunity to solve before the final reveal.
The case revolves around a very clever blackmail setup, accusations of murder and two sisters who might not be as good to each other as they should be. While you know there is going to be a courtroom scene near the end of the book, the pages leading to it represent Mason almost falling into a trap he inadvertently set for himself. Thankfully Della Street and Paul Drake are show more on the case along with the famous attorney, so Perry can turn to his allies to assist him.
Let this be a warning to those of you wishing to steal cyanide capsules from your local chem lab. Just don’t do it! No good will come to you.
Unless you’ve had experience in that sort of thing. show less
The case revolves around a very clever blackmail setup, accusations of murder and two sisters who might not be as good to each other as they should be. While you know there is going to be a courtroom scene near the end of the book, the pages leading to it represent Mason almost falling into a trap he inadvertently set for himself. Thankfully Della Street and Paul Drake are show more on the case along with the famous attorney, so Perry can turn to his allies to assist him.
Let this be a warning to those of you wishing to steal cyanide capsules from your local chem lab. Just don’t do it! No good will come to you.
Unless you’ve had experience in that sort of thing. show less
Interesting conclusion, but less satisfying than most of the books in the Perry Mason series - although he made Sgt. Holcomb look like a fool, Hamilton Burger wasn't on scene to be made into legal hamburger.
A surprisingly good read. My first Perry Mason mystery made me want to read others. A very fast read.
Sergeant Holcomb of Homicide could, when he chose and without apparent effort, be exceedingly nasty, sarcastic and disagreeable.
This time he was in rare form.
This time he was in rare form.
Forty-second Mason. Lawyer nitpicks poorly thought out case to death.
COLLECTION UN MYSTERE
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Author Information

873+ Works 30,714 Members
Mystery writer Erle Gardner was born on July 17, 1889 in Malden, Massachusetts. In 1902, he had moved to Oroville, CA. His parents could not afford to send a second son to college, so he worked in a legal office as a clerk reading law. He spent a short time at Valparaiso University in Indiana but had to drop out because of an illegal boxing show more exhibition. He continued to travel throughout California and read law at several law offices and finally passed the bar in 1911, at the age of 21. He married Natalie Francis Beatrice Talbert on April 9, 1912. In 1916, he formed the Law Firm of Orr and Gardner in Venture, CA. Gardner used many pseudonyms such as Charles Green, Kyle Corning and Grant Holiday. While working as an attorney, he began writing fiction. In 1921, "Nellie's Naughty Nighty" was published in the pulp magazine Breezy Stories. He had a goal of writing 100,000 words a month and would sometimes write two or more stories a day. In 1923, "The Shrieking Skeleton" was sold to the Black Mask Magazine. In the 1930's, Gardner had two manuscripts that were rejected and than "rediscovered" by Thayer Hobson, the president of the William Morrow Publishing Company, and rewritten as courtroom mysteries. During this process, the character Perry Mason was born. In 1933, the first Perry Mason book was written, "The Case of the Velvet Claws." The next one was entitled "The Case of the Sulky Girl" and they were followed by more than eighty additional Mason mysteries. Gardner died on March 11, 1970. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Some Editions
Series
Work Relationships
Is contained in
The Case of the Caretaker's Cat | The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister | The Case of the Angry Mourner by Erle Stanley Gardner
Perry Mason 2 in 1: The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister [and] The Case of the Troubled Trustee by Erle Stanley Gardner
Has the adaptation
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister
- Original title
- The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister
- Original publication date
- 1953
- People/Characters
- Perry Mason; Della Street
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Statistics
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- Reviews
- 7
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- ISBNs
- 11
- ASINs
- 18





























































