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BRAIN WAVES AND DEATH.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1940. Octavo, pp. [1-10] 1-244 [245-246: blank] [note: first and last leaves are blanks], original decorated green cloth, front and spine panels stamped in dark blue, top edge stained blue, fore-edge untrimmed. First edition. A scientist under observation in a sealed room is killed during an experiment in the Howard M. Ward Laboratory where a research team is studying the electroencephalograph. Shortly thereafter a second murder is committed under circumstances as puzzling as the first. The murders are solved by Inspector Noonan, a "practical" Boston detective. BRAIN-WAVES AND DEATH was published posthumously under the pseudonym "Willard Rich" a few weeks after its author, William T. Richards, took his own life. Richards worked for Alfred Lee Loomis and his novel was a thinly veiled account of a real-life laboratory located about 40 miles north of New York City nicknamed "Tuxedo Park." This "secret palace of science" was founded and funded by Loomis, arguably one of the most significant and unaccredited figures in the history of modern military science. Loomis, a world-class tinkerer in his own right, was a visionary who saw that technology would win the looming war-and indeed that an investment in "big science" would be the key to national strength in the future. Loomis went on to establish the MIT Rad Lab and later was instrumental in setting up the Manhattan Project. According to legend, Loomis had all copies of Richards' roman-a-clef bought up and destroyed. Obviously he missed a few copies, but the book is uncommon, especially in jacket. Hubin (1994), p. 678. Adey, Locked Room Murders 958.
THE GREENE MURDER CASE: A PHILO VANCE STORY.
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1928. Octavo, cloth. First edition, second issue. The second issue or state of the first edition with "Copyright, 1927, 1928, by Charles Scribner's Sons" on the copyright page. The first impression was issued March 1928, (the dedication copy has been observed with line "copyright, 1928"), the second issue the same month. A Philo Vance novel.
THE MAN OF PROMISE.
New York: John Lane Company. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head, 1916. Octavo, pp. [1-6] 7-351 [352: blank], original brick red cloth, front and spine stamped in gold. First edition. The author's first novel. Stanford West, the protagonist of the novel, "the story of a man who possesses the potentialities of genius, but is dragged down by his high ambitions and by the women who cross his path..." The Book News Monthly, Volume 35, September 1916-August 1917. The author is popularly known for his Philo Vance mystery novels using the pseudonym S.S. Van Dine.