The Benson Murder Case - A Philo Vance Story
S. S. Van Dine
Gelesen von Kirsten Wever





The Benson Murder Case – A Philo Vance Story is the first of a series of twelve popular mysteries set in New York during the Jazz Age. S. S. Van Dine is the nom de plume of prominent art critic, and member of New York’s avant-garde, W. H. Wright. He rapidly became one of the country’s best-selling authors and the series remained immensely popular for decades, as Philo Vance was featured in dozens of movies, plays and radio shows.
Van Dine’s novels marked a sharp departure from earlier detective fiction. To begin with, the hero represents the antithesis of the familiar hard-boiled detective. He is an eccentric and volatile loner; a highly erudite aesthete; a debonair bon vivant; a fop. Indeed, Van Dine even flirts with his hero’s sexuality where, for instance, a friend tells Vance: “I trust you won’t wear your green carnation,” – then the symbol of homosexuality. Moreover, Philo Vance approaches crime from a totally new standpoint, more or less ignoring the sorts of evidence and inference generally used to solve mysteries. His perspective is primarily psychological. Thus, he tells his friend Van: “The truth can be learned only by an analysis of the psychological factors of a crime, and an application of them to the individual. The only real clues are psychological—not material.” (The author casts himself in the role of the narrator, “Van,” Vance’s old college friend, now his lawyer, advisor and general agent.)
Within minutes of viewing the scene of the crime, Vance throws out veiled hints and innuendos that he knows who murdered Alvin Benson. D. A. John Markham good-humoredly ignores these intimations and soon finds there is enough evidence to make an arrest, when Vance convinces him that his suspect could not possibly be guilty. After developing a strong evidential case against someone else, Vance proves that this second suspect, too, must be innocent. And so, it goes with several more suspects. In the end Vance identifies, and explains how his reasoning immediately pointed to, the actual murderer. (Summary by Kirsten Wever) (10 hr 38 min)
Kapitel
Chapter 1 - Philo Vance at Home | 28:03 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 2 - At the Scene of the Crime | 28:28 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 3 - A Lady's Hand-bag | 24:15 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 4 - The Housekeeper's Story | 24:17 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 5 – Gathering Information | 22:36 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 6 – Vance Offers an Opinion | 26:12 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 7 – Reports an Interview | 31:59 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 8 – Vance Accepts a Challenge | 28:52 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 9 – The Height of the Murderer | 21:18 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 10 – Eliminating a Suspect | 21:22 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 11 – A Motive and a Threat | 26:10 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 12 – The Owner of a Colt-.45 | 18:19 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 13 – The Grey Cadillac | 19:37 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 14 – Links in the Chain | 17:03 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 15 – Pfyfe – Personal | 25:40 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 16 – Admissions and Suppressions | 28:30 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 17 – The Forged Check | 23:38 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 18 – A Confession | 21:31 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 19 – Vance Cross-Examines | 28:21 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 20 – A Lady Explains | 23:43 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 21 – Sartorial Revelations | 26:20 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 22 – Vance Outlines a Theory | 32:48 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 23 – Checking an Alibi | 31:07 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 24 – The Arrest | 30:30 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Chapter 25 – Vance Explains His Methods | 27:24 | Gelesen von Kirsten Wever |
Bewertungen
good mystery





Joe PSB
well-defined characters and excellent reader
a whodunnit puzzle from a psychology perspective





Jon Mark Wilson
A decent puzzle. some of the sleuth's methods were rooted in pseudo Science racial and gender stereotyping, and would seem to make the case for racial profiling and other injudicious approaches. The outcomes sti hung on hard evidence. Vance's banter slows the pace of the story, almost inviting the reader to be just as bored and cynical as he is himself.





Granny G
I can't say I found much charm in the lead character but a good mystery.