Having Wonderful Crime
Yes, it's larky in its plotting, and as usual smart-ass in its dialogue but there are moments that are serious and amazing.
As an alcoholic, I became all too familiar with blackouts and hangovers that kept me in bed for two and three days. Rice opens the book with a long scene involving a man who lacks the strength to get out of bed. He is beseiged by the furies and terrified of what he might have done. This is one of the most powerful morning-after scenes I've ever read. I think most alcoholics would agree with me. And Rice, a terrible alcoholic herself, knew what she was writing about first hand.
Then there's part of a scene in which Rice (using interior monologue) assess a room full of glamorous people and their worth on the glitz scale. Her observations are worthy of Tom Wolfe at his best and nastiest.
This book makes a good case for what we call today the traditional mystery. It's a pleasure to read as pure entertainment but there's a also a wicked social voice relating the reality of this particular time and this particular strata of society. Despite her reputation, I don't think she's hardboiled. At least not in this book. She's just a very good storyeller reporting back from the eyries of the wealthy and privileged. And laughing up her silk sleeve.
2 comments:
Sounds as if she'd have fit right in at the Round Table.
I would love to read this when and if I find a copy. Thanks for writing about it, Ed. Sounds like my cup of tea.
I know the title from the old movie with Pat O'Brien, Carole Landis and George Murphy.
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