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Lester Leith

Created By Erle Stanley Gardner
(1889-1970)

“Do you know, Scuttle, an impartial observer hearing Sergeant Ackley’s theories might come to the conclusion I was guilty of some crime or another…”

He’s not really a private eye, in that he doesn’t really take on paying customers, but he certainly gets paid (and paid well) for his, uh, investigations.

One way or another.

Because wealthy lawyer LESTER LEITH is arguably the greatest con artist to ever appear in the genre; a Raffles-like gentleman thief (or is that “crook detective”?) whose shenanigans make Jim Rockford or Max Latin look like rank amateurs.

It’s been estimated that, over a career of over sixty short stories, mostly in Detective Fiction Weekly, Leith swindled, scammed and cheated over seven million dollars from assorted thieves, blackmailers and other confidence men, all of it donated to charity (minus his customary 20 per cent for “expenses”). He didn’t so much solve impossible crimes —he committed them!

Much to the chagrin of Sergeant Ackley, who’s convinced Leith is a crook himself, and who resorts to installing an undercover cop, Edward Beaver, as Leith’s personal valet, whom he cheekily dubs “Scuttle.” Needless to say, Leith sniffs out the subterfuge immediately, but keeps him on, further enraging Ackley.

Were his adventures related by anyone else, Leith would probably be considered a major pulp character, but coming from the prolific pen of Erle Stanley Gardner, Leith was just another one of the endlessly inventive series characters that Gardner cranked out for the pulps before (and even after) he created meal ticket Perry Mason. In fact, he was so popular that the editors of Detective Fiction Weekly insisted that Gardner submit at least one Lester Leith story every three weeks.

And let’s face it: the charming, glib, crafty, high-flying Leith was always a lot more fun than the righteous and increasingly stodgy old Perry ever was.

SHORT STORIES

COLLECTIONS

FURTHER INVESTIGATION

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

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