Retrato do autor

Rae Foley (1900–1978)

Autor(a) de Reckless Lady

59+ Works 527 Membros 4 Críticas

About the Author

Inclui os nomes: Foley Rae, Elinore Denniston

Disambiguation Notice:

(eng) Elinor Denniston used a number of pseudonyms, including Dennis Allen, Rae Foley, Elinore Dunniston, and Helen K. Maxwell. Beginning in the 1950s, Denniston also ghost-wrote under the name "Emilie Loring", at least some of which may have been based on notes or drafts by Loring (who wrote the first 30 or so of the novels published under her name). 

Séries

Obras por Rae Foley

Girl on a High Wire (1969) 20 exemplares
Reckless Lady (1973) 20 exemplares
This Woman Wanted (1972) 17 exemplares
The Shelton Conspiracy (1967) 17 exemplares
The First Mrs. Winston (1972) 17 exemplares
Fear of a Stranger (1967) 15 exemplares
Malice Domestic (1968) 15 exemplares
Suffer a Witch (1966) 15 exemplares
Fatal Lady (1964) 15 exemplares
The Man in the Shadow (1994) 14 exemplares
Nightmare House (1971) 14 exemplares
Famous American spies (1962) 14 exemplares
Ominous Star (1971) 13 exemplares
Where is Mary Bostwick? (1958) 13 exemplares
The Hundredth Door (1950) 13 exemplares
The Last Gamble (1956) 13 exemplares
Scared to Death (1966) 13 exemplares
Run for Your Life (1957) 13 exemplares
Repent at Leisure (1962) 13 exemplares
Trust a Woman? (1973) 12 exemplares
Where Helen Lies (1976) 12 exemplares
Put Out the Light (1976) 12 exemplares
Girl from Nowhere (1949) 12 exemplares
Sleep Without Morning (1750) 12 exemplares
Wild Night (1966) 11 exemplares
Dark Intent (1996) 11 exemplares
Call It Accident (1965) 11 exemplares
The Girl Who Had Everything (1977) 10 exemplares
One O'Clock at the Gotham (1974) 10 exemplares
Calculated Risk (1970) 10 exemplares
The Brownstone House (1974) 9 exemplares
It's Murder, Mr. Potter (1961) 9 exemplares
Nightmare Honeymoon (1963) 9 exemplares
The Slippery Step (1977) 8 exemplares
Dangerous to Me (1959) 8 exemplares
The Barclay Place (1975) 8 exemplares
Wake the Sleeping Wolf (1952) 7 exemplares
No Hiding Place (1969) 7 exemplares
No Tears for the Dead (1948) 6 exemplares
The Velvet Web (1994) 6 exemplares
The Other Woman (1976) 3 exemplares
Dark Hill (1975) 3 exemplares
Spur aus dem Nichts (1996) 2 exemplares
Ricca da morire 1 exemplar
Cauchemars (1962) 1 exemplar
Madness in the spring (1954) 1 exemplar
Fasornas hus 1 exemplar

Associated Works

Lady Killer | Girl from Nowhere | Place for a Poisoner (1949) — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar
The Etruscan Smile | The Slippery Step | Recoil (1977) — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar
A Fine and Private Place | The First Mrs. Winston — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar
Backlash, Where Helen Lies, The Kingsford Mark (1976) — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome legal
Denniston, Elinor
Outros nomes
Allan, Dennis
Maxwell, Helen K.
Dunniston, Elinore
Foley, Rae
Loring, Emilie
Data de nascimento
1900-09-20
Data de falecimento
1978-05-24
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
North Dakota, USA
Local de falecimento
Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Locais de residência
New York, New York, USA
Ocupações
translator
novelist
ghostwriter
crime writer
detective novelist
theatrical assistant
Relações
Helburn, Theresa (boss)

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Rae Foley was the most prolific of the many pseudonyms of Elinor Denniston. She began her writing career in 1936 as "Dennis Allen" and wrote four crime novels under that name over a 10-year period. Her first book as "Rae Foley" was No Tears for the Dead (1948). As Rae Foley, she wrote fast-paced mysteries and romantic suspense novels, and created several amateur detectives, the most famous of whom was Hiram Potter, a mild-mannered young man from a wealthy New York City family introduced in Death and Mr. Potter (1955; also published as The Peacock Is a Bird of Prey, 1976). Hiram Potter also appeared in Back Door to Death (1963), Call It Accident (1965), Dangerous to Me (1959) and A Calculated Risk (1970). Denniston also worked for decades as the assistant to playwright and pioneering theatrical producer Theresa Helburn. This helps explain why the Rae Foley novels are filled with theater references and playful literary quotes from Shakespeare, while actresses and actors are often the main characters. In the late 1950s, Denniston helped Helburn complete her theatrical memoir A Wayward Quest. Later she was hired as assistant and Dictaphone transcriber to Eleanor Roosevelt while she was working on her memoirs in preparation for an autobiography. After writer Emilie Loring died in 1951, Denniston was hired as a ghostwriter to complete several unfinished Loring manuscripts.
Nota de desambiguação
Elinor Denniston used a number of pseudonyms, including Dennis Allen, Rae Foley, Elinore Dunniston, and Helen K. Maxwell. Beginning in the 1950s, Denniston also ghost-wrote under the name "Emilie Loring", at least some of which may have been based on notes or drafts by Loring (who wrote the first 30 or so of the novels published under her name). 

Membros

Críticas

This is a had-I-but-known from the seventies, when young women in crime novels married at the drop of a hat to men much older than they. In those olden days, vicious ex-wives could be nymphomaniacs. You just don't hear that any more!

Connie Winston, married just that morning after a whirlwind, month-long courtship, arrives with her architect husband at her new home to find a surprise party, which is about to descend from distasteful to disastrous with the arrival of the first Mrs Winston. The very next day someone is murdered, and it seems that all the suspects were present at the party.

Foley's Connie is a much more intelligent and energetic heroine than Mignon G Eberhart's usual droopy orphans, but, just like an Eberhart heroine, she puts herself in danger. Don't trust him, Connie!

A competent mystery with a nice seventies flavour.
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
pamelad | Oct 10, 2021 |
This book kept me second guessing myself the entire way through! Great suspense! The romance was minimal but still cute.
 
Assinalado
MynTop | Apr 8, 2016 |
Bought this for Devilweed because I enjoy the Webb Carrick mysteries set around the coasts of Scotland with the detective an officer in the FIsheries Service. Tis one involves three men missing presumed dead from a an abandoned boat. However, I have now read some of The Heir Hunters -- Dean Quinn, after service as an investigator with the Judge Advocate Corps in the Army has to drop out of law school (Columbia0 and move to California for his health; he lands in California dead broke, and is hired by large handsome woman who owns a motel to clean out a cottage whose tenant was an old man who died 2 years before. Quinn fins bank books indicating the old man had $100,000 (big money in the '40s) and arranges with an heir-hunting service to find an heir. So for, good practical investigation. The third stoiry is apparently a damsel in disress type -not my thing.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
antiquary | Jun 19, 2015 |
The mystery is good, with a satisfying twist that can't quite be predicted before the end of the book. The writing is crisp and all the loose ends are nicely tied up. There are some slightly goofy scenes of romance, but nothing too sappy. Definitely worth reading.

[full review here: http://spacebeer.blogspot.com/2010/11/fatal-lady-by-rae-foley-1964.html ]
½
 
Assinalado
kristykay22 | Nov 10, 2010 |

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Associated Authors

Estatísticas

Obras
59
Also by
32
Membros
527
Popularidade
#47,213
Avaliação
½ 3.3
Críticas
4
ISBN
108
Línguas
3

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