The Silent Bullet by Arthur B. Reeve

(6 User reviews)   1478
By Betty Howard Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Wing One
Reeve, Arthur B. (Arthur Benjamin), 1880-1936 Reeve, Arthur B. (Arthur Benjamin), 1880-1936
English
What if you could solve a crime using science—way before CSI was even a thing? That's the cool promise of *The Silent Bullet*, Arthur B. Reeve's 1912 classic. Meet Professor Craig Kennedy, a whip-smart chemistry professor who's also a part-time detective. He’s got a lab stuffed with gadgets and a brain stuffed with facts. When a rich guy dies in a seemingly impossible carriage accident (during a trip, no less!), Kennedy suspects foul play. But how? The bullet is there—but no gunshot was heard. That's the 'silent bullet.' Kennedy uses rudimentary forensics, from fingerprints to blood tests, to crack the case. It's quick, sharp, and totally hooked me. If you love detective stories with a dash of old-timey tech, this is your cup of herbal tea.
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You know how sometimes you pick up an old book and it feels, well, old? Dusty, slow, too much hand-wringing? That's not The Silent Bullet. This collection of short stories introduces us to Professor Craig Kennedy—a man who is basically Sherlock Holmes, but with a fetish for chemistry gizmos and early 1900's lab tech.

The Story

There's not one long story, but fourteen neat little capers. In the first (and the title tale), a wealthy man is killed during a seemingly carefree car ride. A bullet is found inside his head, but no one heard a gunshot. There's powder residue, blood evidence, and the very first use of a lie detector test (that Kennedy himself designed!). Each story is a quick hit: a counterfeit ring, a chemical bank theft, a lady ghost who might be too real. Professor Kennedy and his journalist buddy Walter Jameson run around New York City, collecting clues in labs, talking to suspects, and piecing it all together with scientificproof. It's like a supercharged The X-Files for your grandfather's grandfather—but better.

Why You Should Read It

The fun part is watching them squirm while doing the kind of police work we now take for granted. Fingerprinting? Brand new. Checking for poison in someone's corpse? Revolutionary. Taking X-rays of dead bodies? That’s a brainstorm moment. The science may be half-baked (and kinda creepy, like autopsying criminals for the 'mark of a killer'), but the joy comes from seeing a smart guy's wheels turn. And the writing is brisk. It’s the briskness of a good newspaper column. No fat. Just plotting, clue dropping, and chatter. Kennedy isn't that funny, but he is huma—he sighs, he yells at his partner, he lectures about molds to crime lords. I don't like mystery books that insult your intelligence. These stories don't. You can't solve them because you don't know about 1912 metallurgy. That's its own kind of magic.

Final Verdict

You need to know this: The book came in 1911, before World War One, before the FBI had fancy labs. So some of the 'science' feels philosophical rather than hard. But if you like the history of crime-solving—its baby steps—you'll love this. Plus, all the drama feels very human: a blackmailer, the crochety landowner, the cop who doesn't know what direction to point a flashlight. It's charming! Recommended for fans of Arthur Conan Doyle, of early Sherlock pastiches, or anyone wanting a taste of what a 1912 smartypants dreamt of. Read this with a cup of tea, snuggled next to a window. But watch out for 'silent' bullet noises ready for none us with these fake words? Eh..you're safe.



⚖️ Legal Disclaimer

This title is part of the public domain archive. Distribute this work to help spread literacy.

Donald White
8 months ago

I started reading this with a critical mind, the attention to detail regarding the core terminology is flawless. Highly recommended for those seeking credible information.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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