File for Record

{{short description|1943 novel by Phoebe Atwood Taylor}}

{{More citations needed|date=June 2024}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}}

{{Infobox book |

| name = File For Record

| image = File:FileForRecord.jpg

| caption = First edition (US)

| author = Phoebe Atwood Taylor (writing as Alice Tilton)

| country = United States

| language = English

| series = Leonidas Witherall mysteries

| genre = Mystery novel / Whodunnit

| publisher = Norton (US, 1943)
Collins (UK, 1944)

| release_date = 1943

| media_type = Print; hardcover and paperback

| isbn =

| oclc = 16937609

| preceded_by = The Hollow Chest

| followed_by = Dead Ernest

}}

File For Record is a novel that was published in 1943 by Phoebe Atwood Taylor writing as Alice Tilton.{{Cite news |last=B. |first=E. M. |date=March 28, 1943 |title=Leonidas Witherall Again |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-springfield-daily-republican-leonida/150388156/ |access-date=June 30, 2024 |work=The Springfield Daily Republican |pages=7E |via=Newspapers.com}}{{Cite news |last=Cromie |first=Alice |date=February 5, 1967 |title=Crime on My Hands |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/chicago-tribune-crime-on-my-hands/150388379/ |access-date=June 30, 2024 |work=Chicago Tribune |pages=BOOKS TODAY p. 14 |via=Newspapers.com}} It is the sixth of the eight Leonidas Witherall mysteries.

Plot summary

It's a rainy day in Dalton (a New England town near Boston) and Leonidas Witherall, "the man who looks like Shakespeare", is off to Haymaker's Department Store to retrieve his umbrella at the Lost and Found. When he enters the Lost and Found department, he's knocked unconscious and awakens in a horse-drawn bakery cart filled with French bread. While answering a call for his services as an air raid warden, he decides to call on Mr. Haymaker himself to complain, only to find Haymaker stabbed with a samurai sword. He enlists the assistance of Constance "Pink" Lately, a housewife clutching a Lady Baltimore cake, Jinx the red-headed Haymaker's elevator girl, and many of the participants in a "Victory Swap Meet" to track down an embezzler, a code thief and a murderer.

Literary significance and criticism

(See Phoebe Atwood Taylor.) This is the sixth Leonidas Witherall mystery novel and it parallels the tone which was maintained in the other seven. A murder occurs under embarrassing circumstances, and Leonidas forms a motley crew of assistants together in order to track down clues, chase around the town, and solve the mystery. There is a strong vein of humor and the plot is fast-moving.

"The Adventures of Leonidas Witherall," was a short-lived radio series at about the time of this novel. In the novels, Witherall is also the author of a radio series and novels about the adventures of stalwart Lieutenant Hazeltine. Some supporting characters continue between novels; there is always a beautiful girl, a handsome former student, and an intrepid housewife.

References

{{reflist}}

{{Phoebe Atwood Taylor}}

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Category:1943 American novels

Category:Novels by Phoebe Atwood Taylor

Category:Novels set in Massachusetts

Category:W. W. Norton & Company books

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