Suspense by Isabel Ostrander

(12 User reviews)   2129
By Nicole Green Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Letters & Diaries
Ostrander, Isabel, 1883-1924 Ostrander, Isabel, 1883-1924
English
Hey, I just finished a book that kept me guessing until the very last page! It's called 'Suspense' by Isabel Ostrander, and it's a classic mystery from 1918 that still feels fresh. Picture this: you're a young woman, Helen Carey, living in a quiet New England town. Suddenly, your wealthy, controlling father is found dead in his study—and the police are calling it suicide. But you know he'd never take his own life. The problem? The door was locked from the inside, and you were the only other person in the house. Now, everyone thinks you're either lying or crazy, and the real killer is still out there, maybe watching you. It's a perfect locked-room puzzle wrapped in family secrets and small-town gossip. If you love trying to solve a mystery before the detective does, this one's for you.
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Isabel Ostrander's 'Suspense' is a tight, clever mystery that proves a good puzzle never gets old. Published in 1918, it moves with a pace that puts many modern thrillers to shame.

The Story

Helen Carey's life is upended when her father, a stern and wealthy man, is found shot in his locked study. The police see an obvious case of suicide, but Helen is certain it was murder. Her conviction puts her in an impossible spot: with no signs of forced entry and no one else in the house, she becomes the prime suspect in the court of public opinion. As whispers spread through her small town, Helen must fight to clear her name and uncover the truth. She's aided—and sometimes hindered—by a cast of characters including a skeptical police chief, a family lawyer with secrets of his own, and a potential suitor whose motives are unclear. The investigation becomes a race against time and reputation, leading to a classic 'gathering of the suspects' finale where all is revealed.

Why You Should Read It

What really hooked me was Helen. She's not a professional sleuth; she's an ordinary woman pushed to her limits by grief and injustice. Her frustration feels real as she battles the polite disbelief of the men around her. Ostrander writes a fantastic 'locked-room' scenario—the howdunit is just as compelling as the whodunit. The setting, a gossipy early 20th-century town, adds a layer of social pressure that heightens every clue and confrontation. It's a snapshot of an era, but the core feeling of being doubted and fighting for the truth is timeless.

Final Verdict

This book is a treat for anyone who loves classic puzzle-box mysteries in the style of early Agatha Christie or Mary Roberts Rinehart. It's for readers who enjoy trying to spot the clues ahead of the characters and appreciate a story driven by a determined, relatable protagonist. If you think golden-age mysteries are stuffy, 'Suspense' might change your mind—it's brisk, smart, and genuinely surprising. A perfect weekend read for a cloudy afternoon.

Robert Walker
1 year ago

Five stars!

Kenneth King
10 months ago

Wow.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (12 User reviews )

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