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Monday, June 29, 2026

Review: The Case of the Lazy Lover - Erle Stanley Gardner


Erle Stanley Gardner is one of the authors I’ve been reading on a semi-regular basis for the longest time. It’s been more than sixty years since I checked out one of his Donald Lam and Bertha Cool novels from the bookmobile, and most of the years since then I’ve read at least one or two of his novels or collections.

Which brings us to THE CASE OF THE LAZY LOVER, a 1947 entry from Gardner’s Perry Mason series. As usual, this yarn gets off to a running start with Mason receiving two checks, both in the same amount but drawn on different banks, from a potential client. This puzzles Mason enough for him to do a little investigating, and he discovers fairly quickly that one of the checks is a forgery. Now he has to know why and what’s going on.

Well, also as usual, it ain’t simple. I learned a long time ago not to try to summarize the plots too much in these reviews of Gardner’s novels. They’re just too dizzying. This one involves mining claims (a favorite plot element of Gardner’s), double identities, seedy tourist courts in the mountains, a barking dog, and the old amnesia bit. And murder, of course. Got to have a murder. And naturally, Mason’s client is the one who’s arrested and charged with the crime, and for a change, it looks like he’s blundered and helped the police draw the noose even tighter around her neck!

A three-chapter-long courtroom scene forms the climax of this book, and with the able assistance of Della Street and Paul Drake, Mason saves his client and uncovers the real murderer . . . maybe. This is a rarity for Gardner, a novel in which the killer’s identity is left a little muddled. I think I know who it was, and I even figured out the most likely solution, also a rarity. But there’s no denying that the ending is a little unsatisfying.

On the other hand, Mason’s receptionist Gertie, who remains a cipher for much of the series, plays a major part in the plot of this one and turns out to be a real hoot and a great character. The long scene in which she’s involved is the high point of this book. Man, Gardner really should have made more use of her! Or maybe the fact that she hardly ever makes an appearance makes her more effective in this one, who knows.

THE CASE OF THE LAZY LOVER is a middling Perry Mason novel, to be honest, but that means it’s still more entertaining and downright fun to read than many of the current mystery novels I read (or try to read). If you’ve never read any of the series, I wouldn’t start with it, but if you’re already a long-time fan, like me, it’s well worth your time.

5 comments:

  1. I am in the midst of a reread of the series and just read this recently. Gardner’s Mason novels are, for me, very difficult to put down. He keeps everything intriguing and fast paced.

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  2. He really is one of the greats. His work really deserves a renaissance, it's still better than most of what's out there. This year so far I've read three of his novels: The Case of the Lame Canary, Turn Up the Heat, and The D.A. Calls It Murder, all excellent. I also really like the critical biography on him: Secrets of the World's Best-Selling Writer: The Story Telling Techniques of Erle Stanley Gardner. Really shows how much of a student of the craft he was, how deliberate he was in studying storytelling and trying to crack it. And he did.

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    1. I agree with you about SECRETS OF THE WORLD'S BEST-SELLING WRITER. It's an excellent book. I also enjoyed Dorothy B. Hughes' biography ERLE STANLEY GARDNER: THE CASE OF THE REAL PERRY MASON. Both are well worth reading. I own both of them and might reread them one of these days.

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  3. Thanks for the review, James. The Dorothy Hughes' biography of Gardner is valuable in that it at least discusses ESG's stint as a writer for the "Perry Mason" radio series which was a daytime soap. The story goes that Gardner formed a friendship with Irving Vendig, the show's head writer and helped Vendig transfer the radio show to TV as "The Edge of Night." I can't vouch for the accuracy of that account.
    Jim Meals

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    1. I don't recall that from the Hughes book, but I don't doubt it. It's pretty well-established that Proctor & Gamble's original plan was to make a daytime soap version of Perry Mason, and when they failed to secure the rights they changed Mason to Mike Karr and did their own version as THE EDGE OF NIGHT. Which was a great show, by the way.

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