“Though brief, and slight in detail, as a one-act play must necessarily be, it is nevertheless so vivid and the fusion is so complete between the dialogue and action that it embraces in small compass all the essentials of the drama.” Jessie B. Rittenhouse.
| + + | N. Y. Times. 12: 220. Ap. 6, ’07. 920w. |
“Among the recent group of dramatic poets, Mr. Cale Young Rice ... has done excellent work, particularly worthy of comment on its architectonic side. Mr. Rice has an instinctive sense of dramatic relations; his dramas move by first intent and the unity of word and action is admirably maintained. His work is not without its immaturities.”
| + + − | Putnam’s. 2: 350. Je. ’07. 120w. |
Rice, William de Groot C., comp. Book of American humorous verse, lea. $1.25. Duffield.
7–25551.
An anthology in which the verse of well-known American humorists appears.
Rich, Charles Edward. [Voyage with Captain Dynamite.] †$1. Barnes.
7–26459.
“The story of three boys who go out from Cottage City in a small yacht and who are caught in a storm and run down by a larger vessel, a filibuster. They are rescued by Captain Dynamite, who carries them off to Cuba. There, having sent word home that they were safe, they take part in many adventures and do, perhaps, a little more than a boy outside a book would be able to do. Harry Hamilton rescues Juanita, a young Cuban girl, who is in prison, and who escapes in his clothes.”—N. Y. Times.