Lgdi 48 11 01 (112) The Flowers That Smelled Of Murder
# The Flowers That Smelled Of Murder
As autumn rain hammers the windows of George Valentine's shabby office, a mysterious woman arrives clutching a dozen roses—flowers that carry the metallic stench of betrayal and blood. What begins as an innocent request to recover a lost photograph spirals into a labyrinth of jealousy, blackmail, and a murder that's already written in invisible ink. George must navigate a treacherous world where seemingly innocent gifts conceal deadly secrets, where the sweet perfume of romance masks the bitter odor of vengeance. Every shadow hides a suspect; every alibi crumbles under the weight of truth. With only his wits, his trusty revolver, and the cold logic of a seasoned gumshoe, George Valentine pursues a killer through the neon-soaked streets of the city. The clock is ticking, and by midnight, another body may join the roses in the ground.
*Let George Do It* epitomized the golden age of detective radio drama—a show that thrived on the Mutual network throughout the late 1940s with Bob Bailey's laconic, world-weary delivery anchoring each tale. Bailey's George Valentine was everyman and anti-hero combined: a small-time private investigator who stumbled into murders, blackmail schemes, and impossible cases that somehow resolved through cleverness rather than luck. The show's writers crafted intricate mysteries that rewarded attentive listeners, while the sound design—creaking doors, gunshots, the rumble of distant traffic—transported audiences directly into the gritty underbelly of postwar America.
Tune in now to "The Flowers That Smelled Of Murder" and experience the golden standard of American noir radio. Let George do it—and uncover what dark secrets bloom beneath beauty's surface.