"Jaguar," by Joseph Wallace, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, September/October 2014.
I will be writing about the structure of this story on Wednesday at Sleuthsayers. Book your tickets now.
Plotwise, this is the story of Ana, who is a rainforest tour guide in Belize. She meets a wealthy American tourist who may be able to get her out of a bad home situation. But there is more going on than appears at first. And since the story alternates between Belize and New York City (that structure thing I mentioned) you get to see cause and effect scrambled together very nicely.
Sunday, August 31, 2014
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Inspector Zhang Gets His Wish, by Stephen Leather
"Inspector Zhang Gets His Wish," by Stephen Leather, on Crime City Central, episode 106.
Technically this is the best story I heard last week. I have been enjoying Crime City Central ever since they created a podcast of one of my own stories. And I have read a few of Mr. Leather's novels. but this is my first exposure to his short stories.
And a good one it is, with a bit of a split personality. It is set in Singapore, the "city without crime." An American tourist has been murdered in a hotel and Inspector Zhang calmly works his way through the investigation.
But the whole tone changes when our heroes realizes, with delight, that this is what he has been waiting for his entire career for: a locked room mystery. He becomes more eccentric as he lectures his suspects and fellow officers on John Dickson Carr's famous seven types of locked room murders. And inevitably he comes up with a fair solution that the reader should have seen coming. You won't, of course. But that's part of the fun.
Technically this is the best story I heard last week. I have been enjoying Crime City Central ever since they created a podcast of one of my own stories. And I have read a few of Mr. Leather's novels. but this is my first exposure to his short stories.
And a good one it is, with a bit of a split personality. It is set in Singapore, the "city without crime." An American tourist has been murdered in a hotel and Inspector Zhang calmly works his way through the investigation.
But the whole tone changes when our heroes realizes, with delight, that this is what he has been waiting for his entire career for: a locked room mystery. He becomes more eccentric as he lectures his suspects and fellow officers on John Dickson Carr's famous seven types of locked room murders. And inevitably he comes up with a fair solution that the reader should have seen coming. You won't, of course. But that's part of the fun.
Sunday, August 17, 2014
Pussycat, Pussycat, by Stephen Ross
"Pussycat, Pussycat," by Stephen Ross, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, September/October 2014.
My fellow SleuthSayers blogger, Stephen Ross, lives in New Zealand, but his latest story is set firmly in the England of the early 1960s.
The narrator is a hardware salesman. Don't think hammers and nails. We're talking about weaponry here. And Pussycat, one of his good friends, announces he wants to buy a rifle. He plans to shoot a pumpkin. Well, that's harmless enough, except he wants to hide in a tree and shoot at the pumpkin when it is on a stick ten feet off the ground.
"It seems to me," I remark, "that your pumpkin had the size and shape of a human head. Are you planning to shoot somebody?"
Pussycat doesn't answer. But he does remark later that he hates the Beatles. "They're what's wrong with this miserable country."
Is he planning to kill a Beatle? Or is something else going on?
I should say I guessed the punchline, so to speak. I think anyone who shares certain characteristics with me would.
My fellow SleuthSayers blogger, Stephen Ross, lives in New Zealand, but his latest story is set firmly in the England of the early 1960s.
The narrator is a hardware salesman. Don't think hammers and nails. We're talking about weaponry here. And Pussycat, one of his good friends, announces he wants to buy a rifle. He plans to shoot a pumpkin. Well, that's harmless enough, except he wants to hide in a tree and shoot at the pumpkin when it is on a stick ten feet off the ground.
"It seems to me," I remark, "that your pumpkin had the size and shape of a human head. Are you planning to shoot somebody?"
Pussycat doesn't answer. But he does remark later that he hates the Beatles. "They're what's wrong with this miserable country."
Is he planning to kill a Beatle? Or is something else going on?
I should say I guessed the punchline, so to speak. I think anyone who shares certain characteristics with me would.
Sunday, August 10, 2014
Francetta Repays Her Debt To Society, by Susan Oleksiw
"Francetta Repays Her Debt To Society," by Susan Oleksiw, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, October 2014.
I thought long and hard before choosing a story for this week. I find this one problematic, as I will explain, but it reached the top of the pile.
As the story opens Francetta is getting out of prison after six months. We see her dealing with some people, one way or another, and making some, shall we say, life choices.
Oleksiw has decided, in this story at least, that less is more. She tells you as little as she can and makes you work out the rest.
For example, a friend gives Francetta some prescription drugs. She then walks out of the building and a policeman promptly searches her, finding nothing. "Something missing, Officer?"
From this we know: 1) the friend was no friend, 2) at least some of the cops in this town are on the take, and 3) Francetta already knew 1) and 2) and ditched the drugs accordingly.
But none of that is stated in the story. You have to figure it out, and that can be problematic. There is a scene near the end where I am still not sure how many characters were present. But it is a good story, with a satisfying ending.
I thought long and hard before choosing a story for this week. I find this one problematic, as I will explain, but it reached the top of the pile.
As the story opens Francetta is getting out of prison after six months. We see her dealing with some people, one way or another, and making some, shall we say, life choices.
Oleksiw has decided, in this story at least, that less is more. She tells you as little as she can and makes you work out the rest.
For example, a friend gives Francetta some prescription drugs. She then walks out of the building and a policeman promptly searches her, finding nothing. "Something missing, Officer?"
From this we know: 1) the friend was no friend, 2) at least some of the cops in this town are on the take, and 3) Francetta already knew 1) and 2) and ditched the drugs accordingly.
But none of that is stated in the story. You have to figure it out, and that can be problematic. There is a scene near the end where I am still not sure how many characters were present. But it is a good story, with a satisfying ending.
Sunday, August 3, 2014
An Open-and Shut Case, by Brian Tobin
"An Open-and Shut Case," by Brian Tobin, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, October 2014.
Hmm... What to say about this one?
Usually when I don't want to say much it is because 1) the story is very short, or 2) there is a twist ending I don't want to give away.
Neither is true in this case. In fact, the problem is that this story does not twist. It is a straight line from the beginning to the end. What makes it stand out is that the hero (and the author) has the nerve to make this plan and carry it out.
When the story begins Sheriff Maloney is looking at the corpse of Curtis Frye, dead in the doorway of his own house. Frye was bad news, a meth-head who killed a woman for thirty bucks. He was tried for the crime three times but most of the evidence had been kicked out on a technicality, resulting in three hung juries.
After getting the investigation started Mahoney gets in his car and makes a phone call:
"You owe me, Roy. This is me calling in my chit. Tonight, you cannot kill yourself."
This is the second time Tobin made my list this year. A dazzling story, right down to the sheriff's explanation of his actions at the very end.
Hmm... What to say about this one?
Usually when I don't want to say much it is because 1) the story is very short, or 2) there is a twist ending I don't want to give away.
Neither is true in this case. In fact, the problem is that this story does not twist. It is a straight line from the beginning to the end. What makes it stand out is that the hero (and the author) has the nerve to make this plan and carry it out.
When the story begins Sheriff Maloney is looking at the corpse of Curtis Frye, dead in the doorway of his own house. Frye was bad news, a meth-head who killed a woman for thirty bucks. He was tried for the crime three times but most of the evidence had been kicked out on a technicality, resulting in three hung juries.
After getting the investigation started Mahoney gets in his car and makes a phone call:
"You owe me, Roy. This is me calling in my chit. Tonight, you cannot kill yourself."
This is the second time Tobin made my list this year. A dazzling story, right down to the sheriff's explanation of his actions at the very end.
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