"Celtic Noir," by Paul Bishop, in Running Wylde. 2012.
This story was originally published in Murder Most Celtic, edited by Martin H. Greenberg, in 2001. I caught up with it in Bishop's e-collection of stories.
Meet Decco, an Irish fella with a bad attitude...
You might think I'm stupid. I ain't. I done loads of them Open university courses on the telly. I ain't stupid. i just ain't like you, and i don't want to be.
I hate effin squares like you - sitting there on your arse reading books. you're boring. i hate boring. Get up, get out, smash somebody's face in. that's what it's all about - a little aggro makes the world go round.
As the story opens a couple of thugs are attempting to round up Decco for a little meeting of the minds with a crime boss named Mandrake. Mandrake's daughter has gone missing and he decided Decco is just the lad to get her back. Before our hero can get started a tough female cop scoops him up. She also wants him to find the daughter, but with a different goal. Then there is a rival gang of bad guys with their own plans...
Good story with an action-packed ending.
A couple of notes. I am no expert on how the Irish speak - the works of Roddy Doyle and Ken Bruen constitute my main first-hand experience - but there is a slight touch of the begorrah-it's-a-leprechan to Decco's prose stylings, as far as I am concerned. Didn't spoil it for me.
More problematic is the e-book itself. There are many styles of e-book production but this may be the sorriest I've run across. No page numbers, no table of contents, no way to get from the beginning to a particular story except by hitting the screen over and over and over....
Sunday, June 10, 2012
Sunday, June 3, 2012
The Case of the Pink Lady, by Casper Bogart
"The Case of the Pink Lady," by Casper Bogart, via Amazon.
"Audacity, more audacity, always audacity," so said Georges Jacques Danton. It is a good motto for writers. I love fiction that drops your jaw and makes you say, "can you do that?"
The pseudonymous Mr. Bogart succeeded in being audacious with this e-tale. It features as its protagonist-detective none other than Dick Nixon. This takes place in 1late 962, one of the lowest points of Tricky's career. After losing the presidency by a hair's breath (and arguably by fraud) he loses a race for governorship in California. As the story begins he makes his famous announcement that the press won't have Dick Nixon to kick around anymore.
A day later he gets a panicked phone call from his campaign manager: there is a dead woman in a convertible in the manager's driveway and the cops want to know what happened. Nixon volunteers to act as the man's attorney and quickly discovers (with a little help from his buddy J. Edgar Hoover) that the dead woman is connected to both him and some high-up Democrats. Dirty tricks abound.
The story is about as believable as Grimm's Fairy Tales (my problem is not the political shenanigans, but Nixon's brilliant detectivizing), but it has an interesting viewpoint on Nixon's character and some wonderful flashes of wit.
The phone rang.
"Yeah."
A female operator. "Long distance from Washington, D.C."
Nixon snorted. "You bet it is."
"Audacity, more audacity, always audacity," so said Georges Jacques Danton. It is a good motto for writers. I love fiction that drops your jaw and makes you say, "can you do that?"
The pseudonymous Mr. Bogart succeeded in being audacious with this e-tale. It features as its protagonist-detective none other than Dick Nixon. This takes place in 1late 962, one of the lowest points of Tricky's career. After losing the presidency by a hair's breath (and arguably by fraud) he loses a race for governorship in California. As the story begins he makes his famous announcement that the press won't have Dick Nixon to kick around anymore.
A day later he gets a panicked phone call from his campaign manager: there is a dead woman in a convertible in the manager's driveway and the cops want to know what happened. Nixon volunteers to act as the man's attorney and quickly discovers (with a little help from his buddy J. Edgar Hoover) that the dead woman is connected to both him and some high-up Democrats. Dirty tricks abound.
The story is about as believable as Grimm's Fairy Tales (my problem is not the political shenanigans, but Nixon's brilliant detectivizing), but it has an interesting viewpoint on Nixon's character and some wonderful flashes of wit.
The phone rang.
"Yeah."
A female operator. "Long distance from Washington, D.C."
Nixon snorted. "You bet it is."
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Jackie Boy, by Sam Roseme
"Jackie Boy" by Sam Roseme, in West Coast Crime Wave, edited by Brian Thornton. BSTSLLR.COM, 2011.
West Coast Crime Wave is an e-anthology that was published last year. I'm not a big iPad book-reader, so I am just getting around to it now.
This is a private eye story but you can kick that Humphrey Bogart image right out of your head. Jackie Giacomo is 300 pounds of grumpy and he got into the business by helping some friends in the mob.
This is how it works: a firm -- either some mobsters or a hedge fund -- buys a bunch of shares in a company. If that investment doesn't provide the returns they were expecting, they find dirt on the CEO or chairman of the board. You know, drugs, cheating on his wife, sex with boys, that kind of stuff. That's where I come in. I follow Mr. CEO around for awhile with my camera and take pictures of him doing his dirty deeds. My client shows the offender snapshots of him playing priest to a choirboy and gives him an offer he can't refuse: buy the shares back at a premium and the photos don't accidentally find their way to the New York Post.
So speaking of choirboys, fat Jackie ain't one. He is also living in San Francisco, in exile from New York because of a disagreement with a mobster friend. As the story opens he has a new case but it turns out to be connected to his New York troubles, which come from protecting one of the few people he actually cares about.
It is a fun twist on the P.I. story.
West Coast Crime Wave is an e-anthology that was published last year. I'm not a big iPad book-reader, so I am just getting around to it now.
This is a private eye story but you can kick that Humphrey Bogart image right out of your head. Jackie Giacomo is 300 pounds of grumpy and he got into the business by helping some friends in the mob.
This is how it works: a firm -- either some mobsters or a hedge fund -- buys a bunch of shares in a company. If that investment doesn't provide the returns they were expecting, they find dirt on the CEO or chairman of the board. You know, drugs, cheating on his wife, sex with boys, that kind of stuff. That's where I come in. I follow Mr. CEO around for awhile with my camera and take pictures of him doing his dirty deeds. My client shows the offender snapshots of him playing priest to a choirboy and gives him an offer he can't refuse: buy the shares back at a premium and the photos don't accidentally find their way to the New York Post.
So speaking of choirboys, fat Jackie ain't one. He is also living in San Francisco, in exile from New York because of a disagreement with a mobster friend. As the story opens he has a new case but it turns out to be connected to his New York troubles, which come from protecting one of the few people he actually cares about.
It is a fun twist on the P.I. story.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Burning Daylight, by David Edgerley Gates
"Burning Daylight" by David Edgerley Gates, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, July/August 2012.
Well, Mr. Gates is having a good year. This is the third time in nine months he has made my best-of-the-week list. And the stories have been very different. One historical, one urban, and now a rural police procedural.
Hector is a deputy in Montana, near a national forest. When two kids report seeing a double-wide trailer explode he knows it was a meth lab. Since the drug-maker went up with his product Hector could have let it go at that but he is a good cop and wants to know what happened: specifically, how did a Gulf War vet wind up making drugs out in the wilderness? And which comes first, supply or demand? The trail becomes darker and grimmer.
"With all due respect, don't preach the law to me."
"The law's all we've got between us and the stone age."
"Frank, for Christ's sake, this IS the stone age."
A powerful piece of work.
Well, Mr. Gates is having a good year. This is the third time in nine months he has made my best-of-the-week list. And the stories have been very different. One historical, one urban, and now a rural police procedural.
Hector is a deputy in Montana, near a national forest. When two kids report seeing a double-wide trailer explode he knows it was a meth lab. Since the drug-maker went up with his product Hector could have let it go at that but he is a good cop and wants to know what happened: specifically, how did a Gulf War vet wind up making drugs out in the wilderness? And which comes first, supply or demand? The trail becomes darker and grimmer.
"With all due respect, don't preach the law to me."
"The law's all we've got between us and the stone age."
"Frank, for Christ's sake, this IS the stone age."
A powerful piece of work.
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Acting On A Tip, by Barbara Arno Modrack
"Acting On A Tip," by Barbara Arno Modrack, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, July 2012.
I have said before that I am a sucker for stories about the possibility of redemption, whether the protagonist chooses to take it or not. This is a nice example.
Marty had been a reporter for the Detroit Free Press for decades when the buyouts started. One day his editor urged him to take the proffered buyout, and the reason clearly had less to do with his age than with the booze Marty was drinking for breakfast.
When he found himself unemployed and probably unemployable Marty's wife made him the following offer:
They would sell the house and move Up North to the family cottage she had just inherited. Ryan, their youngest, would complete his senior year in high school there. Jenny would refresh her nursing license and become the breadwinner. And if they did all that and Marty quit drinking, they could do it together and Jenny would not leave him.
A few months later Marty is clinging to sobriety by his fingernails when he wakes to a radio report of three murders in the little town where they are living. Maybe the Free Press would like a reporter on the scene? Maybe he can drag a scrap of self-worth out of the ruins?
Very satisfactory piece of work.
I have said before that I am a sucker for stories about the possibility of redemption, whether the protagonist chooses to take it or not. This is a nice example.
Marty had been a reporter for the Detroit Free Press for decades when the buyouts started. One day his editor urged him to take the proffered buyout, and the reason clearly had less to do with his age than with the booze Marty was drinking for breakfast.
When he found himself unemployed and probably unemployable Marty's wife made him the following offer:
They would sell the house and move Up North to the family cottage she had just inherited. Ryan, their youngest, would complete his senior year in high school there. Jenny would refresh her nursing license and become the breadwinner. And if they did all that and Marty quit drinking, they could do it together and Jenny would not leave him.
A few months later Marty is clinging to sobriety by his fingernails when he wakes to a radio report of three murders in the little town where they are living. Maybe the Free Press would like a reporter on the scene? Maybe he can drag a scrap of self-worth out of the ruins?
Very satisfactory piece of work.
Monday, May 7, 2012
Five Stars, by Mike Baron
"Five Stars," by Mike Baron, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, July 2012.
I am not surprised that Baron got his start writing comic books. This is one of the most intensely visual stories I have read in a long time. Or, to be more specific, the climax is wildly, inventively, visual.
Bill Scald is a restaurant critic (and what a wonderful name for a critic!). Much to his disgust his boss orders him to review a new Italian restaurant that is clearly owned as a money-laundering site by a mob family. Scald points out that in this case a bad review could have extremely nasty results. His editor, blithely uninterested in such niceties as journalistic integrity, tells him to go off and say something nice.
So Scald decides to dine with protection in the form of his nephew, "a human pit bull with shaved skull, tribal tats, and the flat eyes of a shark. Dyson's favorite cuisine was buffalo wings, but he...was too stupid to know fear." And that's when things get lively and, as I have already indicated, visual. Fun stuff.
I am not surprised that Baron got his start writing comic books. This is one of the most intensely visual stories I have read in a long time. Or, to be more specific, the climax is wildly, inventively, visual.
Bill Scald is a restaurant critic (and what a wonderful name for a critic!). Much to his disgust his boss orders him to review a new Italian restaurant that is clearly owned as a money-laundering site by a mob family. Scald points out that in this case a bad review could have extremely nasty results. His editor, blithely uninterested in such niceties as journalistic integrity, tells him to go off and say something nice.
So Scald decides to dine with protection in the form of his nephew, "a human pit bull with shaved skull, tribal tats, and the flat eyes of a shark. Dyson's favorite cuisine was buffalo wings, but he...was too stupid to know fear." And that's when things get lively and, as I have already indicated, visual. Fun stuff.
Sunday, April 29, 2012
His Daughter's Island, by Brendan DuBois
"His Daughter's Island," by Brendan DuBois, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, July 2012.
Very nice piece opens the new issue of EQMM. Zach Ford is a mild-mannered accountant in a small town in Maine. His beloved daughter goes off to a party at the home of a millionaire and dies. The millionaire's son is whisked out of the country, far from the possibility of justice.
In some stories the next step would be a whole lot of guns and blood, but Mr. Ford has a different idea. He studies up on the millionaire, and then he studies the state and local ordinances. And starts plotting a completely legal vengeance.
DuBois' story reminds me of one of my all-time favorites, "Privilege," by Frederick Forsyth. Both are about a "little man" who uses lateral thinking to go after a foe who seems to powerful to attack. Good piece.
Very nice piece opens the new issue of EQMM. Zach Ford is a mild-mannered accountant in a small town in Maine. His beloved daughter goes off to a party at the home of a millionaire and dies. The millionaire's son is whisked out of the country, far from the possibility of justice.
In some stories the next step would be a whole lot of guns and blood, but Mr. Ford has a different idea. He studies up on the millionaire, and then he studies the state and local ordinances. And starts plotting a completely legal vengeance.
DuBois' story reminds me of one of my all-time favorites, "Privilege," by Frederick Forsyth. Both are about a "little man" who uses lateral thinking to go after a foe who seems to powerful to attack. Good piece.
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Jenny's Ghost, by David Dean
"Jenny's Ghost" by David Dean, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, June 2012.
After I read this story I asked my friend David if there was a crime in it. He replied: "there is no crime in 'Jenny's Ghost'; only consequences." But, he noted, there is a mystery. Having thought about it, I decided there is a crime, of sorts. I'd be interested to know what you thought.
David wrote about the genesis of this story last month at SleuthSayers, but even if he hadn't I would have suspected it started with the location.
Picture the setting: you are in an airport, stuck in that endless half-life between flights and suddenly you spot something that can't possibly be there: a woman who died a decade before. Hell of a set-up, isn't it?
David noted that this is a story about consequences. Not surprisingly it is also about guilt, and the chance of redemption. These are subjects for fiction I am very much drawn to. (Hey, my CD is called Can I Blame You?) David's stories often have a strong spiritual component. (One of his recurring characters is a priest.) As I said, there is a possibility of redemption at the end of this story. Airports can seem like hell, but you don't have to stay in one forever.
After I read this story I asked my friend David if there was a crime in it. He replied: "there is no crime in 'Jenny's Ghost'; only consequences." But, he noted, there is a mystery. Having thought about it, I decided there is a crime, of sorts. I'd be interested to know what you thought.
David wrote about the genesis of this story last month at SleuthSayers, but even if he hadn't I would have suspected it started with the location.
Picture the setting: you are in an airport, stuck in that endless half-life between flights and suddenly you spot something that can't possibly be there: a woman who died a decade before. Hell of a set-up, isn't it?
David noted that this is a story about consequences. Not surprisingly it is also about guilt, and the chance of redemption. These are subjects for fiction I am very much drawn to. (Hey, my CD is called Can I Blame You?) David's stories often have a strong spiritual component. (One of his recurring characters is a priest.) As I said, there is a possibility of redemption at the end of this story. Airports can seem like hell, but you don't have to stay in one forever.
Sunday, April 15, 2012
One Soul At A Time, by Dana Cameron
"One Soul At A Time," by Dana Cameron, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, June 2012.
The latest issue of EQMM gets off to a bang with this story by Dana Cameron. The narrator is a woman who has recently changed names and started a new life. We find out a little bit about why she made this switch, and can guess more. She has had, shall we say, an interesting career.
The story begins with her receiving the obituary of her mentor, a former college professor who changed her life forever. She spots a clue in the obituary that the death was not the accident the authorities claimed and goes rushing off to Maine to discover the truth. This turns out to involve some very bad locals with even worse allies. Our nameless character reluctantly finds herself getting deeper and deeper into the mess, first to pay the debt to her mentor and then, when that is done, for "extra credit, bonus points."
The wise heads tell me that suspense stories are personal and thrillers are global. The world is in danger! But to my mind a suspense story is about what we might call a civilian in danger, while a thriller is about a pro. This story is a thriller, and a very good one.
The latest issue of EQMM gets off to a bang with this story by Dana Cameron. The narrator is a woman who has recently changed names and started a new life. We find out a little bit about why she made this switch, and can guess more. She has had, shall we say, an interesting career.
The story begins with her receiving the obituary of her mentor, a former college professor who changed her life forever. She spots a clue in the obituary that the death was not the accident the authorities claimed and goes rushing off to Maine to discover the truth. This turns out to involve some very bad locals with even worse allies. Our nameless character reluctantly finds herself getting deeper and deeper into the mess, first to pay the debt to her mentor and then, when that is done, for "extra credit, bonus points."
The wise heads tell me that suspense stories are personal and thrillers are global. The world is in danger! But to my mind a suspense story is about what we might call a civilian in danger, while a thriller is about a pro. This story is a thriller, and a very good one.
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Teed Off, by Mark Troy
"Teed Off," by Mark Troy, in Game Face.
This ebook was available for free. It is a collection of stories about Val Lyons, a Hawaii-based private eye.
Glenn Floeck moved down Concourse C of Honolulu International Airport as if he expected everyone to get out of his way.
This first sentence tells us a good deal about Mr. Floeck, doesn't it? Val has signed on as personal driver for this obnoxious golf millionaire who is actually a lousy golfer and a worse human being. we will discover she has an ulterior motive for tolerating his crude advances. She is working on behalf of a client whose sister got a restraining order against Flock, not long before falling of a hotel balcony to her death. Interesting protagonist, good story.
By the way, it first appeared in Fedora, edited by Michael Bracken.
This ebook was available for free. It is a collection of stories about Val Lyons, a Hawaii-based private eye.
Glenn Floeck moved down Concourse C of Honolulu International Airport as if he expected everyone to get out of his way.
This first sentence tells us a good deal about Mr. Floeck, doesn't it? Val has signed on as personal driver for this obnoxious golf millionaire who is actually a lousy golfer and a worse human being. we will discover she has an ulterior motive for tolerating his crude advances. She is working on behalf of a client whose sister got a restraining order against Flock, not long before falling of a hotel balcony to her death. Interesting protagonist, good story.
By the way, it first appeared in Fedora, edited by Michael Bracken.
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