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Home Sweet Homicide by Craig Rice
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Home Sweet Homicide (original 1944; edition 2018)

by Craig Rice (Author)

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1788154,003 (3.66)33
Unoccupied and unsupervised while mother is working, the children of widowed crime writer Marion Carstairs find diversion wherever they can. So when the kids hear gunshots at the house next door, they jump at the chance to launch their own amateur investigation--and after all, why shouldn't they? They know everything the cops do about crime scenes, having read about them in mother's novels. They know what her literary detectives would do in such a situation, how they would interpret the clues and handle witnesses. Plus, if the children solve the puzzle before the cops, it will do wonders for the sales of mother's novels. But this crime scene isn't a game at all; the murder is real, and when its details prove more twisted than anything in mother's fiction, they'll have to enlist Marion's help to sort them out. Or is that just part of their plan to hook her up with the lead detective on the case? The basis for the 1946 film with the same name, Home Sweet Homicide is the novel that launched Craig Rice to literary fame. The book, a comedic crime story that pokes fun at the conventions of the genre, finds "the Dorothy Parker of detective fiction" at her most entertaining.… (more)
Member:MariaStram97
Title:Home Sweet Homicide
Authors:Craig Rice (Author)
Info:MysteriousPress.com/Open Road (2018), 282 pages
Collections:Your library, To read, Currently reading, Read but unowned, Wishlist, Favorites
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Tags:to-read, ebooks-buy

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Home Sweet Homicide by Craig Rice (1944)

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» See also 33 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 8 (next | show all)
Bought @ Shakespeare & Company, slightly campy & funny, very much of that time period ( )
  jimifenway | Dec 12, 2022 |
I don’t think I have ever had this much fun while reading a murder mystery but Home Sweet Homicide, a 1944 mystery novel written by American author Craig Rice kept a smile on my face throughout. The story follows three young siblings as they investigate a murder that occurred in their neighbourhood.

Dinah, April and Archie are the children of widow Marian Carstairs. Marian is an author of mystery novels and the amount of time she must spend over a typewriter, means the children have many hours of unsupervised time. When the nasty woman next door gets murdered, the children decide that they will solve the mystery but allow the world to think that their mother was the detective who put the clues together and therefore get the credit and, hopefully, a boost in her readership. These three, two overly clever sisters and an ingenious younger brother bumble their way through the book and with plenty of humor and heart solve the case and also manage some matchmaking with their distracted mother and the handsome police detective.

I think one’s enjoyment and delight in this book would depend on how much you can tolerate and enjoy these children who manage to be underfoot during all aspects of the police investigation and while the police may be competent in their investigation, they have no idea how to manage children. The author uses plenty of humor to show how these children are able to run rings around the police.

Craig Rice was the pseudonym of Georgiana Anne Randolph Craig and she was a prolific writer of mysteries, several of which were turned into movies during the 1940s and 50s. Home Sweet Homicide was my first book by this author, but I have already managed to stuff a couple more on my Kindle for future enjoyment. ( )
  DeltaQueen50 | Jan 12, 2022 |
I liked it better as it went along (but still think it could have been shorter) but there's no good complaining about that now, the author's unlikely to change her style anytime soon ;-)

Enjoyed the resourceful child detectives (but the law-abiding citizen in me is appalled they kept frustrating the police's genuine efforts), was as keen on the domestic drama (romance!) as the central mystery, and am awfully glad I could tell all the characters apart. It amazes me how often writers will parade a series of people-with-names, not characters, and think there job done. It was clear who everyone in a rather large cast actually was--job well done!

(Note: 5 stars = amazing, wonderful, 4 = very good book, 3 = decent read, 2 = disappointing, 1 = awful, just awful. I'm fairly good at picking for myself so end up with a lot of 4s). I feel a lot of readers automatically render any book they enjoy 5, but I grade on a curve! ( )
  ashleytylerjohn | Oct 13, 2020 |
Marion Carstairs is a prolific mystery writer under a variety of pen names. Her three children—14-year-old Dinah, 12-year-old April, and 10-year-old Archie—have had to look after themselves as much as their mother has looked after them, because supporting a family of four on a single income by writing is a demanding job. Marion is hard at work on her latest novel when a murder happens next door. The kids decide to use their detective smarts picked up from Marion’s novels and solve the crime, ideally giving Marion the credit to boost sales of her books. But solving a mystery as a group of kids is a tougher prospect than they think…

I enjoyed this mystery very much. The kids were just the right amount of precocious: smart but not overly annoying. The atmosphere was light; whichever blurber said that Rice combines mystery conventions with elements of screwball comedy describes it exactly. So if this summary piques your interest, pick up a copy of the book. I’m glad it’s been reprinted via American Mystery Classics so that more people can discover it! ( )
  rabbitprincess | Dec 5, 2019 |
Of the four American Mystery Classics I've read so far (six were released last year and six more will be out in a couple of weeks), this was my favorite. It's got the cheekiest set of kids who decide to solve a mystery and give the credit to their single mom in order to get her publicity since she's a mystery author. It was ridiculously unbelievable as a story but the fun overrode all of that. ( )
  klpm | Mar 1, 2019 |
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Dedication
While the characters and situations in this work are wholly fictional and imaginary; do not portray and are not intended to portray any actual persons or parties, I would like to dedicate it, with my deepest gratitude, to my children: Nancy, Iris, and David. If I had never known them, I would not have had the idea for the story. If they had not given constant help and occasional collaboration, I never could have written it. And, finally, if they had not granted their permission, it could never have been published at all. --CRAIG RICE
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"Don't talk droopy talk," Archie Carstairs said.
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Unoccupied and unsupervised while mother is working, the children of widowed crime writer Marion Carstairs find diversion wherever they can. So when the kids hear gunshots at the house next door, they jump at the chance to launch their own amateur investigation--and after all, why shouldn't they? They know everything the cops do about crime scenes, having read about them in mother's novels. They know what her literary detectives would do in such a situation, how they would interpret the clues and handle witnesses. Plus, if the children solve the puzzle before the cops, it will do wonders for the sales of mother's novels. But this crime scene isn't a game at all; the murder is real, and when its details prove more twisted than anything in mother's fiction, they'll have to enlist Marion's help to sort them out. Or is that just part of their plan to hook her up with the lead detective on the case? The basis for the 1946 film with the same name, Home Sweet Homicide is the novel that launched Craig Rice to literary fame. The book, a comedic crime story that pokes fun at the conventions of the genre, finds "the Dorothy Parker of detective fiction" at her most entertaining.

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First published in 1944, Home Sweet Homicide is one of the most honored mystery novels of the first half of the twentieth century, appearing on the Haycraft-Queen Cornerstone list, James Sandoe's Reader's Guide to Crime, and Melvyn Barnes' Murder in Print. It was filmed in 1946 with Peggy Ann Garner, Randolph Scott, Dean Stockwell, and James Gleason.

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