The Secret of the Morgue, first published in 1932, opens with attorney and investigator Lyman K. Wilbur called in to determine the cause of death of a banker accused of embezzling funds. Is it suicide or murder? The banker's death is followed by the death of the man's wife. Autopsies reveal clues to help solve the gruesome murders. Frederick Eberhard (1889-1944) was a medical doctor, and medical themes and the use of forensic science often appear in his detective and Crime Fictions.From the dust-jacket: If you think you're shock-proof try this new Eberhard thriller. When Dr. Eberhard dissects a corpse for you the chills race up and down your spine ... In his new book Eberhard starts with an innocent appearing suicide. A bank official had apparently paid his penalty for a $200,000 shortage. Soon afterwards his wife burns to death. The coroner's jury calls it an accident ... But Lyman K. Wilbur, lawyer and criminologist disagrees. He succeeds in recovering the corpses, and has an autopsy performed. What secrets of the morgue are disclosed? ... For gruesome thrills no mystery published this season is likely to come within a hundred miles of this new Eberhard hair-raiser.