This volume contains three Perry Mason mysteries.
“The Case of the Velvet Claws,” published in 1933 – Mason’s client Eva, all sugar and velvet on the surface, is the spoiled, wandering wife of blackmailer George Belter. Eva’s latest boyfriend is a Congressman, and when their restaurant date looks as though it is about to wind up in the newspapers, she comes to Perry for help. Complications include a sullen nephew-in-law, a secretive housekeeper, a forged will – and George’s murder.
“The Case of the Sunbather’s Diary,” published in 1958. Arlene Duvall is sunbathing nude when someone steals her clothes, her camper, and the diary in which (or so she says) she has the proof of her father’s innocence in a $400k bank robbery.
“The Case of the Demure Defendant,” published in 1956. Was Nadine Farr the sweet, innocent, pretty young thing she seemed to be? Or was she a ruthless blackmailing killer, as she confessed to her psychiatrist while under the influence of sodium pentathol. Mason gets tangled up in a case with a duplicitous client and a now-you-see-it, now-you-don’t corpse – and a charge of perjury that will get him disbarred if he can’t solve the case.