The Benson Murder Case Audiobook By S. S. Van Dine cover art

The Benson Murder Case

A Philo Vance Mystery, Book 1

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The Benson Murder Case

By: S. S. Van Dine
Narrated by: John Rayburn
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It gives us considerable pleasure to be able to offer to the public the “inside” record of those of former District Attorney Markham’s criminal cases in which Mr. Philo Vance figured so effectively. The true inwardness of these famous cases has never before been revealed by S. S. Van Dine, Mr. Vance’s lawyer and almost constant companion, being the only person who possessed a complete record of the facts and has only recently been permitted to make them public.

After inspecting Mr. Van Dine’s voluminous notes, we decided to publish The Benson Murder Case as the first of the series — not because it was the most interesting and startling, nor yet the most complicated and dramatic from the fictional point of view, but because, coming first chronologically, it explains how Mr. Philo Vance happened to become involved in criminal matters, and also because it possesses certain features that reveal very clearly Mr. Vance’s unique analytic methods of crime detection. If you will refer to the municipal statistics of the City of New York, you will find that the number of unsolved major crimes during the four years that John F.-X. Markham was District Attorney was far smaller than under any of his predecessors’ administrations. Markham projected the District Attorney’s office into all manner of criminal investigations; and, as a result, many abstruse crimes on which the Police had hopelessly gone aground were eventually disposed of. But although he was personally credited with the many important indictments and subsequent convictions that he secured, the truth is that he was only an instrument in many of his most famous cases. The man who actually solved them and supplied the evidence for their prosecution was in no way connected with the city’s administration, and never once came into the public eye.

I am not permitted to divulge the man’s name, and, for that reason, I have chosen, arbitrarily, to refer to him throughout these ex-officio reports as Philo Vance. We now hear the story told by author S. S. Van Dine as though Vance were a real person.

©1926 S. S. Van Dine (P)2022 John D. Rayburn
Crime Mystery Traditional Detectives Historical Detective Private Investigators Amateur Sleuths Fiction

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The Benson Murder Case Audiobook By S.S. Van Dine cover art
The Benson Murder Case By: S.S. Van Dine
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The reader/narrator is rather terrible, especially at the beginning. He almost disregards the punctuation; running together the end of one sentence with the beginning of the next. Likewise commas and other punctuation which the author has deliberately placed there for good reasons. I had to slow down the reading to .85 to remove some of the irritation of listening.
The reader is a past news reader, perhaps this has something in it by way of explanation. Still, any good audio editor would have caught and corrected this.
I will avoid any further titles read by the reader.

Good Story

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pretty standard golden age, famous-sleuth-with-idiosyncrasies fare. the narrator sounds like he’s fighting a cold and not winning though so i had to return early - just listening stressed me out too much.

standard golden age read by a frog

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Golden era movie mystery at it’s finest, narrator tried but forgot to tell a story, he was reading the book and got a little lost.

Classic mystery

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The story after a while was well developed and interesting. However the narrator was very difficult to understand. There were several places that were repeated and one place where the narrator even says on the recording when he started over that he was speaking in the wrong voice. Some editing would’ve been nice. I know the narrator has been around for years, I just feel that his voice was strained.

Narrator difficult to understand

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Me. Rayburn was a great broadcaster but his reading lacks inflection and there are at least two places where he makes audible errors and corrects himself. This recording should be edited.

Story is good, reading is not

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