If you think Mondays are bad, wait 'til you meet the Tuesdays.
Craig Rice wrote eleven novels and numerous short stories about Chicago Lawyer John J. Malone and his friends. I think it's best to read the books in order of publication, but most of the novels are stand-alone. Not so with this one, which is a continuation of the third book in the series - "The Wrong Murder." I've no idea why Rice decided to spread a story over two book-length mysteries, but I think the results are two of her weaker efforts. Still good reading, but PLEASE don't start with this one if you're new to this author. And I strongly advise that you read "The Wrong Murder" before you read this one. Frankly, they're hard enough to follow if you read them in order.
In the first book, Malone's drinking-buddies-and-crime-solving-partners Jake Justus and Helene Brand are ready to leave on their honeymoon when eccentric socialite Mona McClane bets Jake she can kill someone in broad daylight in front of lots of witnesses and get away with it. And a murder like that occurs and Mona has a dandy motive, but so do several other characters. After the murderer is identified, Mona makes a strange remark. She says Jake's solved the WRONG murder! Uh-oh.
This book finds Malone at Joe the Angel's Bar on New Year's Eve, drunk and morose because Jake and Helene have left for their honeymoon and he's ringing in the New Year alone. He figures they'll return and settle down to wedded bliss and respectability and he'll never see them again. Woe is him.
Before he can drink enough to pass out, a stranger stumbles into the bar, calls his name, and collapses. Of course, the man dies and his last act was to press a numbered key (hotel? lock box? apartment?) into Malone's hand. And there's no ID on him and no one knows where he came from or who stabbed him, so the key is the only clue. And, naturally, Malone gets into a drunken brawl and loses the key.
Before he and Chicago Police Captain von Flanagan have made any headway at all, Helene and Jake return from their honeymoon. Only they're not speaking to each other. So much for wedded bliss. Helene is staying with Mona McClane, who has a bunch of guests at her stately mansion. Most of them are as eccentric as she is. And then one of them is stabbed to death. His name is Gerald Tuesday and he was trying to contact Malone at the time he was killed. And he reminds Malone of someone he's seen recently. Could there be more than one Tuesday in this week?
The plot is even stranger than most of Rice's books and certainly more complicated than some of them. Malone and Jake and Helene out in the snow in evening clothes searching an eerie old estate to find a grave that's empty, then full, then empty again. There's a body (stabbed, of course) that they have to get back to Chicago, but Helene knows a guy with a hearse who's willing to bend the law, so no problem. Well, you get the idea.
So why did I like it? Because the writing is wonderful and the characters are delightfully daffy and the dialog is always witty and frequently hilarious. Rice wrote "surreal" or "madcap" mysteries, not traditional figure-out-where-the-suspects-were-when-the-crime-was-committed detective novels. There's some of that, but it's not why Craig Rice fans love her.
If you can relax and enjoy the ride, these are great books.