"The Righter Side," by Reed Farrel Coleman, in Down to the River, edited by Tim O'Mara, Down and Out Books, 2019.
This is Coleman's third appearance in this space. Here is how it starts.
Most places in this
state, it’s the wrong side of the tracks. Not in Brixton, no sir. In Brixton
it’s the wrong side of the river. That’s funny on its face, ’cause any sane
fool’d be hard-pressed to make a case for there being much of a right side in
Brixton, neither. Let’s just say that there’s a…righter side. That the folks on
the righter side’s got access to better crank.
So we know right away this story isn't going to be about tea parties in an English village.
The narrator is Pete Frame and his best friend is Jack Clooney. Jack explains that his own family are "a bunch of born scumbags in charge of what we got comin'."
One of the reasons the two guys get along so well is that Pete and his girlfriend Becki provide a beard for Jack who pretends to be dating her, but is really interested in her brother. That is something Jack's father would never be able to accept and "He has a lot less trouble expressing his will than our Lord and Savior. He or one of his clan lay hands on you, there ain't no room for spiritual interpretation."
I am quoting a lot because the language is what makes this story so special and enjoyable.
Showing posts sorted by date for query coleman. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query coleman. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Sunday, January 13, 2013
Halley's Comet, by Reed Farrel Coleman
"Halley's Comet," by Reed Farrel Coleman, in Crime Square, edited by Robert J. Randisi, Vantage Point, 2012.
I'm a sucker for themed anthologies and this is a good one. The stories, in chronological order, take place in and around Times Square from 1912 to the present day. Fun to see the area go upscale and down as time passes. I highly recommend "The Devil's Face," by Max Allan Collins and Matthew Clemens, and "The Sailor in the Picture," by Eileen Dreyer.
But the favorite, for the second time in as many months, is by Reed Farrel Colman. The setting is the 1970s, the time of Serpico and the Knapp Commission, when the NYPD was full of dirty cops and the dirty cops were full of fear of the Knapp Commission. In this story two police detectives are being pushed into a n action that will move them from being bent to being totally rotten. And just as the point of no return approaches, well, police work intervenes. A wild and twisty climax ensues. Very satisfactory.
I'm a sucker for themed anthologies and this is a good one. The stories, in chronological order, take place in and around Times Square from 1912 to the present day. Fun to see the area go upscale and down as time passes. I highly recommend "The Devil's Face," by Max Allan Collins and Matthew Clemens, and "The Sailor in the Picture," by Eileen Dreyer.
But the favorite, for the second time in as many months, is by Reed Farrel Colman. The setting is the 1970s, the time of Serpico and the Knapp Commission, when the NYPD was full of dirty cops and the dirty cops were full of fear of the Knapp Commission. In this story two police detectives are being pushed into a n action that will move them from being bent to being totally rotten. And just as the point of no return approaches, well, police work intervenes. A wild and twisty climax ensues. Very satisfactory.
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Mastermind, by Reed Farrel Coleman
"Mastermind" by Reed Farrel Coleman, in Long Island Noir, edited by Kaylie Jones, Akashic Press, 2012.
Dear Akashic Press;
Merely being depressing is not enough to make a story noir. Please tell your editors.
Thank you.
Having gotten that out of the way lets move on to a story by Reed Farrel Coleman, who understands noir very well.
Jeff Ziegfeld was always the exception to the rule: the dumb Jew, the blue-collar Jew, the tough Jew. No matter the Zen of the ethnic group the wheel of fortune got you born into, dumb and poor was the unversal formula for tough.
So Jeff is muscle working for an Israeli-American loan shark who constantly puts him down. But Jeff isn't always dumb. He comes up with a big dream: a brilliant scheme for committing a robbery. It is a plan without a flaw.
Except that this is a noir story, and noir means (remember this, oh editors), that the big dreamer gets flattened.
Another fine story in this collection is Kenneth Wishnia's "Blood Drive." Tim Tomlinson's "Snow Job" had a great set-up and a disappointing ending.
Dear Akashic Press;
Merely being depressing is not enough to make a story noir. Please tell your editors.
Thank you.
Having gotten that out of the way lets move on to a story by Reed Farrel Coleman, who understands noir very well.
Jeff Ziegfeld was always the exception to the rule: the dumb Jew, the blue-collar Jew, the tough Jew. No matter the Zen of the ethnic group the wheel of fortune got you born into, dumb and poor was the unversal formula for tough.
So Jeff is muscle working for an Israeli-American loan shark who constantly puts him down. But Jeff isn't always dumb. He comes up with a big dream: a brilliant scheme for committing a robbery. It is a plan without a flaw.
Except that this is a noir story, and noir means (remember this, oh editors), that the big dreamer gets flattened.
Another fine story in this collection is Kenneth Wishnia's "Blood Drive." Tim Tomlinson's "Snow Job" had a great set-up and a disappointing ending.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)