The Whispering Man (1908) is a novel by Henry Kitchell Webster.
Written at the height of Webster's career as a popular author of
magazine serials, The Whispering Man is a story of romance, mystery,
and murder. Filled with twists and complicated motives, The Whispering
Man remains an underappreciated whodunnit over a century after it
appeared in print. "It is strange that we should have been talking about
Dr. Marshall that very night, I and my new friend and neighbor, across
our little table in the restaurant. Talking about him we were, and at
considerable length, too, before I bought the paper that had the news of
his death in it." Out to dinner with his friend Arthur Jeffrey, a
painter, Drew learns of the death of Dr. Roscoe Marshall, a prominent
alienist, from natural causes. Only moments before, they had been
discussing Marshall's work in relation to Drew's expertise in legal
evidence, to which Jeffrey had responded by detailing his portrait work
for Marshall's wife. As it turns out, Madeline Marshall, née Cartwright,
is a former love interest of Drew's, and the discussion has loosened a
painful memory within him. Shocked by the news of the doctor's death,
Drew looks across the dining room to find Marshall's son, who has come
at his mother's request. In the cab back to their apartment, the young
man has one word on his lips: murder. With a beautifully designed cover
and a professionally typeset manuscript, this edition of Henry Kitchell
Webster's The Whispering Man is a classic of American mystery fiction
reimagined for modern readers.