ISBN-13: 9781540747532 / Angielski / Miękka / 2016 / 366 str.
The Ashwill Case (Story Circa 1958), subtitled A Lawyer's Story, is an American detective novel. Set in New York City, it concerns the murder of a retired merchant, Lionel Ashwill, in his New York mansion. He is a merchant whose material wealth is matched by his eminence in the community and reputation for good works. He is also the guardian of two striking nieces who share his Fifth Avenue mansion. The detective is Ken Detective McConnell, NYPD. Mary, her uncle's favorite, is to inherit his fortune at his death. As this mystery opens, that lamentable event has just occurred. Ashwill has been shot to death and circumstances point to one of his young wards... The older partners at Ashwill's Lawyers firm are absent when they learns that an old client, Mr. Ashwill, has been murdered and so Young Raymond a junior associate is the one that rushes to the scene. A coroner's inquest has already been arranged, and it's this -- much like a trial-scene in a legal thriller -- to present the facts, evidence, and suspects in the case. The case demonstrate the snares associated with circumstantial evidence. While Detective Ken Detective McConnell is the investigator that puts the pieces together, he is not front and center for much of the novel. The Ashwill Case is narrated by the young lawyer, Everett Raymond; Detective McConnell enlists him to help with the investigation but they're only partially a team, as Detective McConnell manipulates the young man to help him solve the case. It is known that his estate will go, pretty much in its entirety, only to Mary. Ashwill is found shot in his library, nothing appears to have been stolen -- so it doesn't look like robbery -- and all the indications are that it was an inside job: it must have been someone in the house. Complicating matters: the ladies' maid, Hannah, disappeared that night. There's a mysterious gentleman who hangs around; what looks like a secret marriage; lost, hidden, misappropriated, forged, and burnt documents galore; and a second very suspicious death.