"The Hotel des Mutilées," by Jim Williams, in Knife Edge Anthology, Marble City Publishing, 2013.
Earlier this week I read a review written by a man who normally deals with nonfiction. This piece was about a novel and he ended with a variation of that phrase so familiar from fifth grade book reports: "To find out what happens next you will have to read the book."
I shook my head at that amateur effort, but now I am feeling some sympathy. I can't tell you much about this excellent tale by Jim Williams without giving away the store. So forgive me if I keep it brief.
It's Paris between the wars and our narrator meets an American in a bar who says he is a writer. The narrator explains that he fixes situations, no details given. The writer, who calls himself Scotty, asks him to talk about the most fascinating person he ever met. So the fixer talks about a guy he met in World War I.
And that's where I have to stop, lest I say too much. This is one of the stories where the joy comes in figuring out what's going on. For me, the enlightment came in three distinct bursts, about three different characters.
To find out what happened... oh, you know.
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Acting Lessons, by Amanda Stern
"Acting Lessons," by Amanda Stern, in The Marijuana Chronicles, edited by Jonathan
Santlofer, Akashic Press, 2013.
So: what's a mystery story?
People who don't read them think they know. A mystery is a story in which someone gets murdered and a detective looks for clues, talks to suspects, and reveals the killers. Easy-peasy.
People who actually read mysteries know that that was a pretty good description of the field in 1922. Since then it got a little more complicated.
Otto Penzler describes a mystery (and I am paraphrasing) as a astory in which crime or the threat of crime, is a major element. And that indeed covers P.I. stories, suspense, inverted detective stories, and other tales that don't fit the first description.
Unfortunately, it also covers The Scarlet Letter, Hamlet, Oedipus Rex, and The Brothers Karamazov, none of which most people would consider mysteries. So there is something missing, maybe an attitude thing, that separates crime stories.
All of which is my way of explaining that this week's story barely qualifies for my field. After all, this book doesn't promise stories about crime; just stories about pot. I suppose you could argue that if drugs are illegal then all stories about drugs are crime stories, but then we get into that attitude problem again.
So why am I reviewing this story? Because it is so good, that's why. Here's the opening.
The initial quantum fluctuation that burst forwrd to create this universe implanted particles prgrammed, in years nine to fourteen of a human girl's life, to flood the neural regions and saturate her suggestible self with one single, rabid desire: to become an actress.
Okay, I loved that.
The narrator describes her experiences at age fourteen taking lessons from Ian and Caroline a perfect Californai-style couple in New York who specialize in drama lessons for teenagers. They want to know what deep-secret agonies their students are concealing, so that they may build their acting skills out of them. And our heroine finds herself lacking: "I was furious that my parents didn't pull out my hair or toss me from windows."
Of course, she has a deepset problem and that is the insecure need to please Ian and Caroline. Especially Ian. And Ian figures she can reveal her deep secrets if she only tries some pot. Or how about cocaine?
So if there is a crime here it is an adult man giving drugs to a fourteen year old girl. And certainly there is the not-so-hidden reason he wants to get close to her. If this was a standard crime story something nastier would happen. But I am happy with the way it turns out.
Santlofer, Akashic Press, 2013.
So: what's a mystery story?
People who don't read them think they know. A mystery is a story in which someone gets murdered and a detective looks for clues, talks to suspects, and reveals the killers. Easy-peasy.
People who actually read mysteries know that that was a pretty good description of the field in 1922. Since then it got a little more complicated.
Otto Penzler describes a mystery (and I am paraphrasing) as a astory in which crime or the threat of crime, is a major element. And that indeed covers P.I. stories, suspense, inverted detective stories, and other tales that don't fit the first description.
Unfortunately, it also covers The Scarlet Letter, Hamlet, Oedipus Rex, and The Brothers Karamazov, none of which most people would consider mysteries. So there is something missing, maybe an attitude thing, that separates crime stories.
All of which is my way of explaining that this week's story barely qualifies for my field. After all, this book doesn't promise stories about crime; just stories about pot. I suppose you could argue that if drugs are illegal then all stories about drugs are crime stories, but then we get into that attitude problem again.
So why am I reviewing this story? Because it is so good, that's why. Here's the opening.
The initial quantum fluctuation that burst forwrd to create this universe implanted particles prgrammed, in years nine to fourteen of a human girl's life, to flood the neural regions and saturate her suggestible self with one single, rabid desire: to become an actress.
Okay, I loved that.
The narrator describes her experiences at age fourteen taking lessons from Ian and Caroline a perfect Californai-style couple in New York who specialize in drama lessons for teenagers. They want to know what deep-secret agonies their students are concealing, so that they may build their acting skills out of them. And our heroine finds herself lacking: "I was furious that my parents didn't pull out my hair or toss me from windows."
Of course, she has a deepset problem and that is the insecure need to please Ian and Caroline. Especially Ian. And Ian figures she can reveal her deep secrets if she only tries some pot. Or how about cocaine?
So if there is a crime here it is an adult man giving drugs to a fourteen year old girl. And certainly there is the not-so-hidden reason he wants to get close to her. If this was a standard crime story something nastier would happen. But I am happy with the way it turns out.
Sunday, December 8, 2013
The Waverley Knees, by Ray Banks
"The Waverley Knees," by Ray Banks, in Noir Nation 2, edited by Eddie Vega, 2013.
What I like best about this story, I suppose, is its central conceit: that to a homeless guy on the sidewalk, the good citizens passing by are just a collection of knees.
Living down here, the knees were all you saw, and they saw little of you. they were international -- those trousers had a German accent, that skirt was French, those massive backpacks over there were probably Dutch or whatever language it was that sounded like English in reverse.
Grizzly is the homeless guy, stuck in front of Waverley Station in Edinburgh with his dog Winston. Except Winston used to belong to someone else, which is where the conflict comes in, and gives Grizzly reason to get up off the sidewalk and, in true noir style, try to accomplish something. But, in true noir fashion, there are no happy endings.
What I like best about this story, I suppose, is its central conceit: that to a homeless guy on the sidewalk, the good citizens passing by are just a collection of knees.
Living down here, the knees were all you saw, and they saw little of you. they were international -- those trousers had a German accent, that skirt was French, those massive backpacks over there were probably Dutch or whatever language it was that sounded like English in reverse.
Grizzly is the homeless guy, stuck in front of Waverley Station in Edinburgh with his dog Winston. Except Winston used to belong to someone else, which is where the conflict comes in, and gives Grizzly reason to get up off the sidewalk and, in true noir style, try to accomplish something. But, in true noir fashion, there are no happy endings.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Saving Bessie's Worms, by Lynne Murphy
"Saving Bessie's Worms," by Lynne Murphy, in Mesdames of Mayhem: Thirteen, edited by
M.H. Callway, Donna Carrick, and Joan C. O'Callaghan, Carrick Publishing, 2013.
What we have here is a collection of crime stories by Canadian women. So far, this is my favorite. It is an example of what has been called "geezer noir," which seems to be a growing field as my fellow baby boomers head into retirement. Not that this particular example is exactly noir.
The setting is the Cottonwoods Condo, a senior residence, and home to Bessie Bottomly. A few days after she is hospitalized with a broken hip her neighbors realize that no one is taking care of her worms. She raised them to make compost for the building's plants.
The Sisterhood rushes to form Operation Worm Rescue, but it turns out that there is one resident in the Condo who is not a fan of invertebrates. Can the Sisterhood save the worms?
Each of these ladies has a distinct personality, and their own way of talking. I like 'em.
M.H. Callway, Donna Carrick, and Joan C. O'Callaghan, Carrick Publishing, 2013.
What we have here is a collection of crime stories by Canadian women. So far, this is my favorite. It is an example of what has been called "geezer noir," which seems to be a growing field as my fellow baby boomers head into retirement. Not that this particular example is exactly noir.
The setting is the Cottonwoods Condo, a senior residence, and home to Bessie Bottomly. A few days after she is hospitalized with a broken hip her neighbors realize that no one is taking care of her worms. She raised them to make compost for the building's plants.
The Sisterhood rushes to form Operation Worm Rescue, but it turns out that there is one resident in the Condo who is not a fan of invertebrates. Can the Sisterhood save the worms?
Each of these ladies has a distinct personality, and their own way of talking. I like 'em.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
I am not Fluffy, by Liza Cody
"I Am Not Fluffy," by Liza Cody, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, December 2013.
There's a lot going on in this one. It takes a while to piece the story together and understand the way the narrator is telling it. So, who is she (besides not being Fluffy, I mean)?
I worked as a hostess and greeter at a bar-restaurant six nights a week for five years while Harvey qualified to be a tax lawyer. And for two nights a week Harvey was going round to Alicia's flat to bounce her bones. "you were never there," he complained. "What was I supposed to do all by myself every night?"
What indeed. Insult to injury: Alicia was an old friend of hers. And now that Harvey is making a bundle he wants a no-fault divorce and a big white wedding to his new love.
Our narrator goes for textbook passive-aggressive tactics: refusing to sign the divorce papers. She can't afford a lawyer on her hostess salary so she changes to a less respectable but more remunerative profession.
And she begins writing her protests against the world around her in chalk on the sidewalk, signing them Fluffy.
Is this a story about a nervous breakdown? A split personality? Or is our heroine learning to not be Fluffy anymore, to be a person who can take care of herself?
Damn good work.
There's a lot going on in this one. It takes a while to piece the story together and understand the way the narrator is telling it. So, who is she (besides not being Fluffy, I mean)?
I worked as a hostess and greeter at a bar-restaurant six nights a week for five years while Harvey qualified to be a tax lawyer. And for two nights a week Harvey was going round to Alicia's flat to bounce her bones. "you were never there," he complained. "What was I supposed to do all by myself every night?"
What indeed. Insult to injury: Alicia was an old friend of hers. And now that Harvey is making a bundle he wants a no-fault divorce and a big white wedding to his new love.
Our narrator goes for textbook passive-aggressive tactics: refusing to sign the divorce papers. She can't afford a lawyer on her hostess salary so she changes to a less respectable but more remunerative profession.
And she begins writing her protests against the world around her in chalk on the sidewalk, signing them Fluffy.
Is this a story about a nervous breakdown? A split personality? Or is our heroine learning to not be Fluffy anymore, to be a person who can take care of herself?
Damn good work.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Othello Revised, by Denise Middlebrooks
"Othello Revised," by Denise Middlebrooks, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, December 2013.
One big problem with little stories is they don't leave much room for us critics to pontificate and display our wisdom. Last week I talked about my philosophy concerning flash fiction. This week we aren't dealing with a flash, but definitely a short tale.
And it is one I like a lot. In fact, I probably care for it more than most people would, for two reasons. First, I find myself in a circumstance not too far removed from the protagonist, and second, the story, Middlebrooks' first, reminds me of a certain piece by James Thurber, one of my heroes.
The narrator has just written a mystery novel and his wife recommends he takes it to a professional editor. The editor turns out to be an interesting person, a real estate agent who reinvented herself in the recession, and she has some fascinating suggestions about the book. Or what she thinks is the book.
And there we have to stop. Go read the story. It's November and you deserve a treat.
One big problem with little stories is they don't leave much room for us critics to pontificate and display our wisdom. Last week I talked about my philosophy concerning flash fiction. This week we aren't dealing with a flash, but definitely a short tale.
And it is one I like a lot. In fact, I probably care for it more than most people would, for two reasons. First, I find myself in a circumstance not too far removed from the protagonist, and second, the story, Middlebrooks' first, reminds me of a certain piece by James Thurber, one of my heroes.
The narrator has just written a mystery novel and his wife recommends he takes it to a professional editor. The editor turns out to be an interesting person, a real estate agent who reinvented herself in the recession, and she has some fascinating suggestions about the book. Or what she thinks is the book.
And there we have to stop. Go read the story. It's November and you deserve a treat.
Monday, November 11, 2013
Acknowledgments, by Christopher Coake
"Acknowledgments," by Christopher Coake, in Kwik Krimes, edited by Otto Penzler, Thomas and Mercer, 2013.
Kwik Krimes is a collection of flash fiction, mysteries under 1000 words long. I have written before about flash stories and concluded that there are basically three categories: outline, anecdote, and other.
The outline is generally the least satisfactory. It attempts to cram into onto a postcard a plot that really needed more room to grow. The anecdote tends to work better; one little slice of life (or in the case of this book, often a slice of death). By the other I mean something bizarre, often something that would be painful at greater length but uniquely fits the little niche of the flash.
Take for example, Mr. Coake's contribution, which immediately made me think: why didn't I think of that?
The narrator simply offers his deep thanks to everyone who made his latest work possible, and we get the idea he is not talking about a work of literature:
Margaret, my wife. You were this story's subject, its reason for being. I think, by the end, you understood me at last.
Very clever.
Other stories I like a lot in the part I have read so far include stories by Chuck Caruso and Bill Crider, as well as tales from friends of mine, Gary Alexander and Jo Dereske.
Kwik Krimes is a collection of flash fiction, mysteries under 1000 words long. I have written before about flash stories and concluded that there are basically three categories: outline, anecdote, and other.
The outline is generally the least satisfactory. It attempts to cram into onto a postcard a plot that really needed more room to grow. The anecdote tends to work better; one little slice of life (or in the case of this book, often a slice of death). By the other I mean something bizarre, often something that would be painful at greater length but uniquely fits the little niche of the flash.
Take for example, Mr. Coake's contribution, which immediately made me think: why didn't I think of that?
The narrator simply offers his deep thanks to everyone who made his latest work possible, and we get the idea he is not talking about a work of literature:
Margaret, my wife. You were this story's subject, its reason for being. I think, by the end, you understood me at last.
Very clever.
Other stories I like a lot in the part I have read so far include stories by Chuck Caruso and Bill Crider, as well as tales from friends of mine, Gary Alexander and Jo Dereske.
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