Lgdi 52 02 11 (283) Cortez Island
# Let George Do It: Cortez Island
When George Valentine turns up at a fog-shrouded dock on Cortez Island, he finds more than he bargained for—a missing heiress, a trail of contradictory clues, and a cast of suspects whose stories don't quite add up. From the moment the fog horn wails in the distance and our intrepid private investigator sets foot on that desolate stretch of coastline, the tension never lets up. As George pieces together the puzzle of the Cortez Island mystery, listeners will find themselves drawn deeper into a labyrinth of blackmail, hidden identities, and desperate secrets. The atmospheric sound design transports you straight to those rain-slicked streets and shadowy warehouses—you can almost feel the Pacific spray on your face as George navigates one dangerous encounter after another. This is detective work at its finest: gritty, unpredictable, and utterly compelling.
By 1952, *Let George Do It* had firmly established itself as one of radio's most reliable sources of hard-boiled entertainment. Starring Bob Bailey as the quick-witted and resourceful George Valentine, the show ran successfully across the Mutual network for nearly a decade, delivering the kind of smart, snappy dialogue and intricate plotting that kept millions of Americans glued to their receivers. Each episode was crafted with a writer's attention to character and a showman's sense of pacing—George was never just a stereotypical gumshoe, but a thinking man's detective with genuine personality and heart beneath the wisecracks.
If you've never experienced the golden age of radio detective fiction, Cortez Island is an excellent place to start. Whether you're a longtime fan or a curious newcomer, settle in, dim the lights, and let the sound of that famous opening theme pull you into George Valentine's world—where danger lurks around every corner and nothing is ever quite as it seems.