Craig Rice (1) (1908–1957)
Author of The G-String Murders
For other authors named Craig Rice, see the disambiguation page.
Series
Works by Craig Rice
Los Angeles Murders 4 copies
I'll See You in My Dreams 1 copy
Hard Sell {short story} 1 copy
En ¤senator er skudt 1 copy
Asesinatos en jueves 1 copy
Mr. Malone lebt gefährlich. 1 copy
Malone är död 1 copy
El cuarto cartero 1 copy
Oito vultos às três 1 copy
Associated Works
The Web She Weaves: An Anthology of Mystery and Suspense Stories by Women (1983) — Contributor — 60 copies, 2 reviews
Murder Plus: True Crime Stories from the Masters of Detective Fiction (1992) — Contributor — 46 copies
To the Queen's Taste: The First Supplement to 101 Years Entertainment Consisting of the Best Stories Published in the First Four Years of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine (1946) — Contributor — 28 copies
For love or money; the 1957 anthology of the mystery writers of America (1957) — Contributor — 4 copies
The Devil in the Bush / Expert in Murder / The Lucky Stiff / Rumor Hath it — Contributor — 2 copies
Hånden i sandet og andre virkelige kriminalsager skildret af berømte kriminalforfattere (1974) 1 copy, 1 review
The Innocent Bystander | Atomsk | A Corpse in the Diplomacy | He's Late This Morning (1949) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Craig, Georgiana Ann Randolph
- Birthdate
- 1908-06-05
- Date of death
- 1957-08-28
- Gender
- female
- Relationships
- Lipton, Lawrence (husband)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Illinois, USA
Members
Reviews
While readers might be tempted to dismiss this one as one of those lightweight novelty mysteries due to the cover and its “written by an old film star” origins, that would be a terrible mistake. First of all, though there is some hokum about George Sanders writing this, it has Craig Rice’s fingerprints all over it. While he may have “helped” with some movie-set ambiance and other details, there is no doubt in my mind after reading this breezy and incredibly entertaining murder show more mystery that Rice not only penned it, but she gave it the full monty in regard to her talent. While the grittier aspects of her delightful Malone series are softened a bit, the story and the surroundings, and the dialog all sparkle like champagne. Even more astounding is how perfectly Rice has captured George Sanders, from his voice to his keen wit and droll humor.
The murder mystery itself is well done, and nothing to sneeze at. Sanders, as himself, is finally getting a break from playing The Falcon and The Saint films by making a Western. Someone is shot during a scene, despite all the guns supposedly being loaded with blanks. When it’s quickly discovered it may have been Sanders’ gun that did the killing, he removes the evidence. He’s suspected anyway, yet can’t reveal what he’s done because it will only make him look more guilty. So Sanders must use everything he’s learned playing The Falcon and The Saint in order to find the real killer.
What transpires is a delicious mystery with a likable protagonist in the “real” George Sanders — just as you remember him from the movies. The supporting cast of personal assistants, actors, directors, producers and other movie-related people, and Sanders’ interaction with them as he seeks to ferret out a killer among them, make for an entertaining murder mystery. A missing piece of film comes into play for a while, and there are people attempting to cover for other people, even confessing at one point. There is tons of atmosphere in this humorous — yet slightly deadly — mystery; Sanders himself has more than one close call, and a couple more murders occur before our suave hero can figure it all out.
There is a completely different listing for Crime On My Hands under Craig Rice's name which is the same book, and it may eventually be merged with these editions. Rice and Sanders could easily have mailed this in way back when, but they did anything but, making it a breezy delight to read. Great fun! show less
The murder mystery itself is well done, and nothing to sneeze at. Sanders, as himself, is finally getting a break from playing The Falcon and The Saint films by making a Western. Someone is shot during a scene, despite all the guns supposedly being loaded with blanks. When it’s quickly discovered it may have been Sanders’ gun that did the killing, he removes the evidence. He’s suspected anyway, yet can’t reveal what he’s done because it will only make him look more guilty. So Sanders must use everything he’s learned playing The Falcon and The Saint in order to find the real killer.
What transpires is a delicious mystery with a likable protagonist in the “real” George Sanders — just as you remember him from the movies. The supporting cast of personal assistants, actors, directors, producers and other movie-related people, and Sanders’ interaction with them as he seeks to ferret out a killer among them, make for an entertaining murder mystery. A missing piece of film comes into play for a while, and there are people attempting to cover for other people, even confessing at one point. There is tons of atmosphere in this humorous — yet slightly deadly — mystery; Sanders himself has more than one close call, and a couple more murders occur before our suave hero can figure it all out.
There is a completely different listing for Crime On My Hands under Craig Rice's name which is the same book, and it may eventually be merged with these editions. Rice and Sanders could easily have mailed this in way back when, but they did anything but, making it a breezy delight to read. Great fun! show less
Sadly, hardly anyone remembers Craig Rice today. She was such a popular mystery writer during the 1940s that she graced the cover of Time Magazine — yep, that’s correct — and her sales rivaled those of Agatha Christie. Her style was unique, blending screwball with mystery, her protagonist a hard-drinking lawyer fond of blondes. Her best stuff was breezy and fun, and people couldn’t stop reading her. Her own drinking and romanticism contributed to her slide into absolute obscurity, show more but didn’t dim her optimism, apparently. In many ways, she had the same bottom’s up belief that many of her characters did.
I first ran across her work years ago, when I saw a wonderful film based on her work, Having Wonderful Crime. It starred Pat O’Brien — as her main character, John Malone — and the lovely but doomed Carole Landis. The film had charm, and moved at a wonderful pace. Later I tracked down a copy of the book and realized Craig Rice was something very special. Like many great writers who had something special, she is out of vogue today. Even those who peruse the sub-genre of mystery and noir dismiss her, I suppose. She doesn’t write mean, unpleasant, dark or twisted, and the drinking in her books all leads to murderous fun. Craig Rice isn’t considered cool, therefore. Different strokes for different folks, I suppose.
While this isn’t her best John Malone short story, it is delightful fun, and will give readers a sense of how she wrote. I vacillate between whether her novels or short stories were better, but tend to prefer — only by a hair — her shorter John J. Malone stories. He has his hands full in Don’t Go Near — make that singular, since he’s dousing his throat with gin with the other — at a circus trying to figure out who has been killing lions, or if they have. Rice paints the circus very colorfully, in a pulp sort of way, and luckily for Malone, there’s a sexy blonde speed demon to make time with while he and a girl nicknamed Bitsy — because of her size — help him protect Leopold the Lion. The plot’s a bit gossamer, the ending implausible — and a tad abrupt — but it’s also harmless and fun. It’s short, breezy, and leaves you wishing it were much longer, which is always a good sign. Hopefully she’ll get reprinted one day, and readers will get reacquainted with her work. But since she didn’t write dark dreary tales about losers on the fringes, I wouldn’t hold my breath. show less
I first ran across her work years ago, when I saw a wonderful film based on her work, Having Wonderful Crime. It starred Pat O’Brien — as her main character, John Malone — and the lovely but doomed Carole Landis. The film had charm, and moved at a wonderful pace. Later I tracked down a copy of the book and realized Craig Rice was something very special. Like many great writers who had something special, she is out of vogue today. Even those who peruse the sub-genre of mystery and noir dismiss her, I suppose. She doesn’t write mean, unpleasant, dark or twisted, and the drinking in her books all leads to murderous fun. Craig Rice isn’t considered cool, therefore. Different strokes for different folks, I suppose.
While this isn’t her best John Malone short story, it is delightful fun, and will give readers a sense of how she wrote. I vacillate between whether her novels or short stories were better, but tend to prefer — only by a hair — her shorter John J. Malone stories. He has his hands full in Don’t Go Near — make that singular, since he’s dousing his throat with gin with the other — at a circus trying to figure out who has been killing lions, or if they have. Rice paints the circus very colorfully, in a pulp sort of way, and luckily for Malone, there’s a sexy blonde speed demon to make time with while he and a girl nicknamed Bitsy — because of her size — help him protect Leopold the Lion. The plot’s a bit gossamer, the ending implausible — and a tad abrupt — but it’s also harmless and fun. It’s short, breezy, and leaves you wishing it were much longer, which is always a good sign. Hopefully she’ll get reprinted one day, and readers will get reacquainted with her work. But since she didn’t write dark dreary tales about losers on the fringes, I wouldn’t hold my breath. show less
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 show more 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. show less
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 show more 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. show less
Real Rating: 3.5* of five
There is nothing new under the sun. The George Sanders of this book is an actor playing a part; the author George Sanders is that actor in real life, writing with ghostwriter [Craig Rice], thus proving that speaking words written by others is a powerful draw to actors.
Ms. Rice had quite a career in Golden Age Hollywood. Sanders did, too. Many excellent movies; many dreary ones too. No career is without low points. But the Sanders of this novel isn't low, he's rising show more in a rare starring turn. That's what he has longed for while he racked up thousands of hours playing detectives in popular but unrewarding serials (today he'd be a TV star). So now he's got it, what happens but there's a murder commited in front of him! And it's not the last!
How "Sanders" solves the crime is nice and twisty, thanks to Craig Rice. It was a pleasant read, it felt warmly nostalgic in its tone (Sanders-the-narrator giving a behind the scenes tour of a location shoot), and the proceedings are wrapped up with a resounding bang.
Rainy weekend? Here's you a pacey, twisty, attention-holding read. show less
There is nothing new under the sun. The George Sanders of this book is an actor playing a part; the author George Sanders is that actor in real life, writing with ghostwriter [Craig Rice], thus proving that speaking words written by others is a powerful draw to actors.
Ms. Rice had quite a career in Golden Age Hollywood. Sanders did, too. Many excellent movies; many dreary ones too. No career is without low points. But the Sanders of this novel isn't low, he's rising show more in a rare starring turn. That's what he has longed for while he racked up thousands of hours playing detectives in popular but unrewarding serials (today he'd be a TV star). So now he's got it, what happens but there's a murder commited in front of him! And it's not the last!
How "Sanders" solves the crime is nice and twisty, thanks to Craig Rice. It was a pleasant read, it felt warmly nostalgic in its tone (Sanders-the-narrator giving a behind the scenes tour of a location shoot), and the proceedings are wrapped up with a resounding bang.
Rainy weekend? Here's you a pacey, twisty, attention-holding read. show less
Lists
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 52
- Also by
- 36
- Members
- 1,918
- Popularity
- #13,418
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 56
- ISBNs
- 142
- Languages
- 8









