Dipping into the archive for this one
today…
A few days ago someone in one of the mystery-focused
Facebook groups asked the members to identify their favorite Emma Lathen title.
Emma Lathen is the pseudonym of economist Mary Jane Latsis and attorney Martha
Henissart. Their financial and legal expertise formed the backdrop of their
mysteries, which each highlighted an industry or socioeconomic issue (fast food
franchises, grain exports, parochial schools, professional hockey, the Winter
Olympics). Inevitably money in some form is the impetus for the crime. No
psychological suspense, no serial killer, no love triangle: money and the lack
of it or the desire for more is front and center.
It is difficult to choose among the entries in a
long and almost uniformly excellent series but I decided that Death Shall
Overcome (Macmillan, 1966) was among my candidates for favorite. I then
realized I had not re-read it for some time and pulled my worn paperback copy
off the shelves. Its themes are timeless and I found it stands up to the
passage of 50 years quite well.
Wall Street is in turmoil as one of the oldest
brokerages among them proposes a black man for a seat on the New York Stock
Exchange. The octogenarian owner of the brokerage has chosen Edward Parry of
Atlanta -- Yale graduate, Rhodes scholar, and multimillionaire -- to break the
color barrier at the NYSE hard on the heels of the signing of the Civil Rights
Act. (The authors were only a little ahead of reality: Joseph Searles III
actually became the first African American trader on the New York Stock Exchange
floor in 1970.)
At the formal reception where Mr. Parry is to be
introduced to the New York financial community, one of his prospective
colleagues drops dead. Everyone assumes the cause is a stress-induced heart
attack until the autopsy discovers nicotine poisoning. Then someone shoots at
Mr. Parry as he leaves his house one morning. Protests, counter-demonstrations,
and wild rhetoric ensue. (A number of the scenes from this book could have been
ripped out of last week’s newspaper.) John Putnam Thatcher, senior vice-president
of Sloan Guaranty Trust, the third largest bank in the world, is drafted to try
to calm the various groups while the Exchange processes Mr. Parry’s application
for a seat and the police search for the killer. His own knowledge of the financial world and
his involvement with the people most affected lead him to the identity of the
culprit.
Part of the charm of this series is the inside look
at the Sloan, which is very much like any large corporation with its internal
politics, quirky personalities, and relatives of the president to be worked
around. The supporting cast of characters that appear in each book are similar
to office colleagues everywhere and invest the story with a personal flavor as
well as help Thatcher’s investigations. This particular book is full of
visually complex scenes that would film nicely: the sit-in at the main Sloan
bank, the NAACP fundraiser, Thatcher and his colleagues hiding from
demonstrators by riding the Staten Island ferry back and forth.
As always, the well-written story is
witty and tightly plotted. If Emma Lathen is an author new to you, this book is
an excellent place to become acquainted with her work.
- Publisher: Macmillan Pub Co; First Edition (June 1966)
- ISBN-10: 9997518446
- ISBN-13: 978-9997518446
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/45XNjyr
Aubrey Hamilton © 2017, 2025
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on
Federal IT projects by day and reads mysteries at night.


One of my favorite series. Time to revisit one or two.
ReplyDelete