Mr. Keen, Tracer Of Lost Persons (1352) 1951 07 20 The Case Of Murder And The Strange Woman
In this gripping installment from the summer of 1951, listeners will find themselves drawn into the shadowy world of intrigue and danger as Mr. Keen pursues one of his most perplexing cases: a murder mystery entangled with the enigmatic appearance of a woman whose very presence seems to unravel the carefully constructed lies of everyone around her. As thunder rumbles ominously in the background and a woman's cry pierces the darkness, Keen must untangle fact from fiction, separating the innocent from those with blood on their hands. The case pulls him through the neon-lit streets and into the hidden corners where secrets fester—where a missing person's reappearance becomes not a happy ending, but the beginning of something far more sinister.
For fourteen years at this point, Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons had captivated millions with its formula of methodical detective work and psychological suspense. Unlike the fantastical escapades of some contemporaries, Keen's cases felt disturbingly real—grounded in the mundane world of blackmail, jealousy, and human desperation. The show's success lay in its restraint; tension built not from wild action, but from Keen's quiet persistence and the slow revelation of motives. By 1951, radio's golden age was beginning to wane, yet Mr. Keen remained a fixture, proving that audiences still craved intelligent mysteries solved by a protagonist who relied on observation and logic rather than luck.
This July episode exemplifies the show's mastery of atmosphere and character. Tune in as Mr. Keen confronts a case where finding the missing person is just the beginning—where truth becomes more elusive than ever, and where danger lurks in the most unexpected places. Press play and step into the shadows of 1951.