"Tell Me About Your Day," by Lynne Lederman, in Murder New York Style - Fresh Slices, edited by Terrie Farley Moran, L&L Dreamspell, 2012.
This nifty piece starts out as noir and goes elsewhere. The narrator is a recovering substance abuser who is trying to be a better person (and if that isn't a formula for a classic noir character, I don't know what is). He is living in a dumpy apartment, going to AA and NA and making a point of visiting his only living relatives, a niece and her daughter. The result is that when the niece is murdered the cops and social workers bring the traumatized little girl to him. They are hoping that a familiar face might encourage her to report something about the unknown killer.
And that leaves our hero trying to figure out how to fit a kid into his tiny, miserable life.
Damn. Can't smoke with the kid here. He reomved the cigatette and contemplated it. Can't go outside, can't leave her. Realy too cold to hang out the window, let aone sit on the fire escape. She'd know, anyway. He shredded it into the ashtray. Have to get rid of that, and the matches. Weren't little kids always playing them, starting fires?
The whole story is in the man's head, trying to sort through his growing responsibilities and limited possibilities. Then there is an unexpected turn, a clever bit of deduction that suggests there might be a ray of hope ahead.
Nice piece of work.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Monday, November 19, 2012
Only People Kill People, by Laura K. Curtis
"Only People Kill People," by Laura K. Curtis, in Murder New York Style - Fresh Slices, edited by Terrie Farley Moran, L&L Dreamspell, 2012.
Been working through this anthology produced by the New York chapter of Sisters In Crime. Curtis takes a unique viewpoint in her story: the narrator is a gun.
For eight years, it was my honor to serve and protect Sam Bradley, his family, and his employers Sam took care of me, and I took care of him...
But this is a crime story so things have to go bad for Sam and his gun. Original idea, well written.
Been working through this anthology produced by the New York chapter of Sisters In Crime. Curtis takes a unique viewpoint in her story: the narrator is a gun.
For eight years, it was my honor to serve and protect Sam Bradley, his family, and his employers Sam took care of me, and I took care of him...
But this is a crime story so things have to go bad for Sam and his gun. Original idea, well written.
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Dial Country Code 91 +M for Murder, by Stewart Brown
It was a tough choice this week between this story and "Dead Men's Socks," by David Hewson in the same issue. I may have bene influenced by the fact that Hewson's story was in the same category as last week's pick, by S.J. Rozan. Both were excellent stories about maverick cops in foreign countries who solve problems in spite of their superiors.
Brown's first story is very different, more a bit of humor than a traditional tale.
"Welcome to the Spade Detective Angency. If your life is in immediate danger, please hang up and call the local authorities. For English, please stay on the line. Para el Español, por favor, pulse uno. Press 2 if you would like to hear about our weekly crime-buster specials..."
Yes, even detective work can be outsourced, with someone dubious results. The unlikely named Hamish, a proud graduate of the New Dehli School for Detective Studies, "the fourth-highest ranked detective school in all of New Delhi," is on the job, or at least the phone. His client, Miss Nancy Drew, is suspicious about the mysterious death of her husband...
All very silly. But we can't be noir every week, can we?
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Golden Chance, by S.J. Rozan
"Golden Chance," by S.J. Rozan, in Ellery Queen's Magazine, December 2012.
EQMM's last issue of 2012 opens with something different from my buddy S.J. Rozan The story is set in a small village in Western China, where Lo Pen-wei, "a disheveled lump of a man," investigates crime for the Public Security Bureau. He is a shrewd, cheerful, Columbo-type cop, the only one of his fellows who bothered to learn the language when he moved to the territory of the Uighurs. "Lo conceded that... for official interviews and instructions Mandarin would suffice; but other conversations -- for example, those he would be most interested in overhearing in the streets -- would not be held in Mandarin."
As the story opens Lo is investigating vandalism of the office of the Housing Commission, which he does in a typically indirect way: by playing a chess-like game with his shopkeeper friend Sadiq. In the course of the game he learns that the people are upset about government plans that would destroy a local landmark. He also learns that his friend has three marriage-age daughters and no money for doweries. Possibly he can solve all the problems with cunning plan. And if he can get one more corrupt official out of office, so much the better.
Mystery stories tend to flourish in democracy and not do so well in dictatorships where no one has faith in justice being done. (And there is my bland generalization for the day; glad to have it over with.) But Rozan has created an interesting character and a believable setting. Perhaps we will hear more about Mr. Lo.
EQMM's last issue of 2012 opens with something different from my buddy S.J. Rozan The story is set in a small village in Western China, where Lo Pen-wei, "a disheveled lump of a man," investigates crime for the Public Security Bureau. He is a shrewd, cheerful, Columbo-type cop, the only one of his fellows who bothered to learn the language when he moved to the territory of the Uighurs. "Lo conceded that... for official interviews and instructions Mandarin would suffice; but other conversations -- for example, those he would be most interested in overhearing in the streets -- would not be held in Mandarin."
As the story opens Lo is investigating vandalism of the office of the Housing Commission, which he does in a typically indirect way: by playing a chess-like game with his shopkeeper friend Sadiq. In the course of the game he learns that the people are upset about government plans that would destroy a local landmark. He also learns that his friend has three marriage-age daughters and no money for doweries. Possibly he can solve all the problems with cunning plan. And if he can get one more corrupt official out of office, so much the better.
Mystery stories tend to flourish in democracy and not do so well in dictatorships where no one has faith in justice being done. (And there is my bland generalization for the day; glad to have it over with.) But Rozan has created an interesting character and a believable setting. Perhaps we will hear more about Mr. Lo.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Trick or Treat, by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
"Trick or Treat," by Kristine Kathryn Rusch, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery magazine, December 2012.
This was a tough week, since Hitchcock featured stories by two of my favorite writers about two wonderful series characters. Mitch Aldeman's Bubba Simms stories and Kristine Kathryn Rusch's Spade/Paladin tales have several things in common. Both feature men who are six-five, and both rely more on character and language than on plot. But there are big differences as well.
Bubba is a three-hundred-pound weightlifter; a private eye in Florida. Spade is a four-hundred-pound Microsoft millionaire who uses his money and numbers skills as a forensic accountant to run the finances for science fiction conventions. Spade (that's his nom de fandom, we never learn is real one) has an occasional partner, Paladin, an athletic young woman who is his opposite in physique, temperment, and almost everything except intellect.
The reason I chose Rusch's story this time is that it had a more interesting plot than Aldeman's "Eureka." I could see where that story was headed pretty much from the beginning, but Rusch's story took it's time in unfolding.
In "Trick or Treat," Spade is working at a convention in San Francisco on Halloween weekend when Paladin asks him to help out by babysitting a troublesome kid named Casper. Spade, well aware that an overweight misfit millionaire hanging around with a child could be misconstrued, grumbles "The worst situations in the world always start with the words, 'trust me.'" But he always finds it hard to resist Paladin.
The center of the story is the fat man and the grumpy Casper, both smart and both lacking social skills, trying to establish a productive relationship. Naturally, it involves computer programs. And crime.
Both stories are very much worth a read.
This was a tough week, since Hitchcock featured stories by two of my favorite writers about two wonderful series characters. Mitch Aldeman's Bubba Simms stories and Kristine Kathryn Rusch's Spade/Paladin tales have several things in common. Both feature men who are six-five, and both rely more on character and language than on plot. But there are big differences as well.
Bubba is a three-hundred-pound weightlifter; a private eye in Florida. Spade is a four-hundred-pound Microsoft millionaire who uses his money and numbers skills as a forensic accountant to run the finances for science fiction conventions. Spade (that's his nom de fandom, we never learn is real one) has an occasional partner, Paladin, an athletic young woman who is his opposite in physique, temperment, and almost everything except intellect.
The reason I chose Rusch's story this time is that it had a more interesting plot than Aldeman's "Eureka." I could see where that story was headed pretty much from the beginning, but Rusch's story took it's time in unfolding.
In "Trick or Treat," Spade is working at a convention in San Francisco on Halloween weekend when Paladin asks him to help out by babysitting a troublesome kid named Casper. Spade, well aware that an overweight misfit millionaire hanging around with a child could be misconstrued, grumbles "The worst situations in the world always start with the words, 'trust me.'" But he always finds it hard to resist Paladin.
The center of the story is the fat man and the grumpy Casper, both smart and both lacking social skills, trying to establish a productive relationship. Naturally, it involves computer programs. And crime.
Both stories are very much worth a read.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
I Heard A Romantic Story, by Lee Child
"I Heard A Romantic Story," by Lee Child, in Love Is Murder, edited by Sandra Brown, Mira, 2012.
When an author makes most of his income writing one kind of novel it must be a great relief to occasionally break loose and write a very different kind of short story. One example of that is Field of Thirteen, Dick Francis's collection of tales, none of which use the first person narration so familiar from all of his novels.
And Lee Child, when he isn't writing his Reacher novels produces some excellent little stories. And this one is all about style.
Love is Murder is the third anthology from the International Thriller Writers, and the theme is romantic suspense. Many of the stories are fairly standard romantic suspense - boy and girl either fear each other or fight a common enemy. But Child is on a very different wavelength.
Did I mention that this piece is all about style? For one thing it all written in one long breathless paragraph. And here's how it starts:
I heard a romantic story. It was while I was waiting to kill a guy. And not just a guy, by the way. They were calling this guy a prince, and I guess he was... .
The narrator is a hit man for our government and the romantic story involves the spy who authorized the killing and the woman whose job it was to get the mark in the right place at the right time. You see, she happened to be the boss spy's lover. But that won't interfere with the plan, will it?
Child is far too good a writer to use the unconventional style just for giggles. It adds to the suspense, and makes the outcome less predictable. Nice piece of work.
When an author makes most of his income writing one kind of novel it must be a great relief to occasionally break loose and write a very different kind of short story. One example of that is Field of Thirteen, Dick Francis's collection of tales, none of which use the first person narration so familiar from all of his novels.
And Lee Child, when he isn't writing his Reacher novels produces some excellent little stories. And this one is all about style.
Love is Murder is the third anthology from the International Thriller Writers, and the theme is romantic suspense. Many of the stories are fairly standard romantic suspense - boy and girl either fear each other or fight a common enemy. But Child is on a very different wavelength.
Did I mention that this piece is all about style? For one thing it all written in one long breathless paragraph. And here's how it starts:
I heard a romantic story. It was while I was waiting to kill a guy. And not just a guy, by the way. They were calling this guy a prince, and I guess he was... .
The narrator is a hit man for our government and the romantic story involves the spy who authorized the killing and the woman whose job it was to get the mark in the right place at the right time. You see, she happened to be the boss spy's lover. But that won't interfere with the plan, will it?
Child is far too good a writer to use the unconventional style just for giggles. It adds to the suspense, and makes the outcome less predictable. Nice piece of work.
Sunday, October 14, 2012
The Double, by Janice Law
"The Double" by Janice Law in Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine, Issue 7
My friend Janice has created a little gem here, I think.
Malik has the fortune, good or bad, of resembling the General, his country's beloved dictator. Naturally he is assigned the job of impersonating the General, saving him from boring meetings and assassingation attempts.
But the General is a far-thinker and he sends Malik, with proper supervision, to set up a new life for himself in Miami, just in case at some time in the future the General turns out not to be so beloved. And that works fine until the inevitable happens.
Because only one person can live that new life, right?
My friend Janice has created a little gem here, I think.
Malik has the fortune, good or bad, of resembling the General, his country's beloved dictator. Naturally he is assigned the job of impersonating the General, saving him from boring meetings and assassingation attempts.
But the General is a far-thinker and he sends Malik, with proper supervision, to set up a new life for himself in Miami, just in case at some time in the future the General turns out not to be so beloved. And that works fine until the inevitable happens.
Because only one person can live that new life, right?
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