Just in time for Election Day, we have a story today about a man stabbed to death - alone inside a voting booth. And then, to add to the fun, we also get an actor apparently strangled by a haunted oak tree. Or how about the man who drives a horse and carriage onto a covered bridge in New England - and never emerges out the other side? Or the railway guard robbed and murdered inside a locked and seemingly inaccessible caboose?
All of these are stories in Edward D. Hoch's marvelous collection, "Diagnosis: Impossible--The Problems of Dr. Sam Hawthorne." Just as John Dickson Carr was the acknowledged master of the impossible crime/locked room novel, Hoch was certainly the master of the mystery short story, having written some 950 of them over the course of his career. "Diagnosis Impossible" is the subject of today's review on the Classic Mysteries podcast, and you can listen to the full review here.
There are a dozen stories, all of them featuring Dr. Sam Hawthorne, a small-town Connecticut doctor with a knack for solving seemingly impossible crimes. If you love mysteries that appear to be impossible (but have rational - if occasionally far-fetched - solutions), you will savor these stories by one of the 20th century's finest mystery writers.
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