Mr. Keen, Tracer Of Lost Persons (1259) 1949 10 06 The Case Of The Man Who Invented Death
Step into the shadow-draped offices of Mr. Keen on this crisp October evening in 1949, where a most peculiar mystery awaits. A brilliant but tormented scientist has vanished without a trace, leaving behind only cryptic notes and a revolutionary—some say dangerous—discovery that could reshape the very nature of human mortality. As Mr. Keen and his trusty assistant Mike Clancy pursue the threads of this baffling case, they'll navigate a labyrinth of academic intrigue, moral philosophy, and deadly secrets. The tension crackles through every scene: who is searching for this mysterious inventor, and what dark purposes do they intend? With each clue uncovered and each suspect questioned, the picture grows only more disturbing. This is no ordinary missing persons case—this is a race against time to prevent a terrible truth from falling into the wrong hands, and perhaps to save the scientist from himself.
For over a decade, Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons had captivated millions of Americans with its methodical approach to detective work and genuinely puzzling mysteries. Unlike the flashy private eyes and hard-boiled heroes populating the airwaves, Mr. Keen represented something more cerebral—the triumph of patient investigation and logical deduction. By 1949, the show had become a cornerstone of NBC's dramatic schedule, praised for its thoughtful scripts and atmospheric production that transformed the listener's living room into a dimly-lit detective's office.
Don't miss this haunting episode that exemplifies everything that made the golden age of radio drama unforgettable. Tune in for The Case Of The Man Who Invented Death and discover why millions tuned in faithfully each week to follow Mr. Keen's meticulous pursuit of the truth. Some mysteries demand to be solved—and some truths demand to stay buried.