"Knock-Out Whist," by David Levien, in in Dark City Lights, edited by Lawrence Block, Three Rooms Press, 2015.
This is a story about the levels of life in New York City, and those going up versus those going down. Jerry Riser - a riser is, of course, one who rises; it is also the part of a step that doesn't get stepped on - is a disgraced ex-cop, reborn as a shady private eye.
He has just finished a big case for one of the people at the top, causing major trouble for another one, a mayoral candidate. The politician sends thugs around to find out who hired Riser, and they offer his choice of a beating or a payoff.
He could also use the cash. On the other hand it was a question of honor, the old vintage. There were still a few bottles of it left around, and once it was uncorked, it was sticky stuff.
One of the best P.I. stories I have read this year.
Sunday, July 5, 2015
Sunday, June 28, 2015
Red's White F-150 Blues, by Scott Montgomery
"Red's White F-150 Blues," by Scott Montgomery, in Murder on Wheels, Eleven Tales of Crime on the Move, presented by the Austin Mystery Writers, Wildside Press, 2015.
The editors sent me a free copy of this book.
Red Clark spends a lot of time taking care of his baby son, because the factory put him on half time and Britney has had to take on more nursing shifts at the hospital. One day his old friend Billy Ray - part-time drug dealer and non-stop trouble -- shows up to ask a favor. The bank wants to repossess his truck. Can he hide it in Red's garage for a while?
Of course, Red says yes. Of course, Britney gets mad. While they're arguing about it - and about meatloaf and other affairs of state -- the TV announces that a guard was killed in a bank robbery. Police are looking for a certain truck.
Uh oh.
What follows are a lot of bad decisions, some startling secrets and - oh yes - a beheading. This is pretty much what Texas noir means to me.
The editors sent me a free copy of this book.
Red Clark spends a lot of time taking care of his baby son, because the factory put him on half time and Britney has had to take on more nursing shifts at the hospital. One day his old friend Billy Ray - part-time drug dealer and non-stop trouble -- shows up to ask a favor. The bank wants to repossess his truck. Can he hide it in Red's garage for a while?
Of course, Red says yes. Of course, Britney gets mad. While they're arguing about it - and about meatloaf and other affairs of state -- the TV announces that a guard was killed in a bank robbery. Police are looking for a certain truck.
Uh oh.
What follows are a lot of bad decisions, some startling secrets and - oh yes - a beheading. This is pretty much what Texas noir means to me.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
Bowery Station, 3:15 A.M., by Warren Moore
"Bowery Station, 3:15 A.M.," by Warren Moore, in Dark City Lights, edited by Lawrence Block, Three Rooms Press, 2015.
A little snippet of a story, but a memorable one. The nameless narrator is hanging around one of the least used subway stations in the middle of the night, when...
I saw the girl standing on the Brooklyn bound side of the platform. You might not have noticed anything, but I saw the firsts clenched at her sides and I saw her lips moving, and I knew what she was gearing up to do.
Can he prevent her from taking her own life? And if he does, what will happen next?
Worth finding out.
A little snippet of a story, but a memorable one. The nameless narrator is hanging around one of the least used subway stations in the middle of the night, when...
I saw the girl standing on the Brooklyn bound side of the platform. You might not have noticed anything, but I saw the firsts clenched at her sides and I saw her lips moving, and I knew what she was gearing up to do.
Can he prevent her from taking her own life? And if he does, what will happen next?
Worth finding out.
Sunday, June 14, 2015
Drone, by Rob Hart
"Drone," by Rob Hart, in Thuglit, Issue 16.
I can't find the name of the comedian who complained, approximately: "You always hear on the news about drug deals that went wrong. Why don't they ever talk about the thousands of drug deals that went right?"
Because they aren't newsworthy, of course. And they wouldn't make very good fiction.
So you can be pretty sure something is going to go pear-shaped in this tale of three crooks who come up with a brilliant new way to move cocaine around the city.
Melinda is the bright one, and she has built a drone capable of flying five pounds of product. Billy the narrator, and his short-on-impulse-control brother Richie have the connections with a major drug dealer with the not-at-all-ominous name of T. Rex.. All they need is to demonstrate what inventors call "proof of concept" and they are in for a very profitable partnership.
What could go wrong? Oh, something or other. Take it away, Richie:
"Well, there was a wrench up on the roof, and I hit him with it, and that all turned into a thing."
Yeah, I hate it when that happens. Good story.
I can't find the name of the comedian who complained, approximately: "You always hear on the news about drug deals that went wrong. Why don't they ever talk about the thousands of drug deals that went right?"
Because they aren't newsworthy, of course. And they wouldn't make very good fiction.
So you can be pretty sure something is going to go pear-shaped in this tale of three crooks who come up with a brilliant new way to move cocaine around the city.
Melinda is the bright one, and she has built a drone capable of flying five pounds of product. Billy the narrator, and his short-on-impulse-control brother Richie have the connections with a major drug dealer with the not-at-all-ominous name of T. Rex.. All they need is to demonstrate what inventors call "proof of concept" and they are in for a very profitable partnership.
What could go wrong? Oh, something or other. Take it away, Richie:
"Well, there was a wrench up on the roof, and I hit him with it, and that all turned into a thing."
Yeah, I hate it when that happens. Good story.
Sunday, June 7, 2015
Dyed to Death, by K.G. McAbee
K.G. McAbee. "Dyed to Death," in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, July/August 2015.
Last week I said my favorite story was all about setting. And here we are again.
McAbee's story won the Black Orchid Novella Award, given each year bu AHMM and the Wolfe Pack for a novella that best carries on the Rex Stout tradition. The winners usually have a Nero Wolfe/Archie Goodwin format, meaning a great detective and an assistant narrates the story. This is true in "Dyed to Death," but as I said, it is the setting that is the true main character.
It is the late twenties in a company town somewhere in the south. Our narrator is Sam, a boy in his late teens. He never recovered from an injury in the cotton mill when he was fifteen (the same mill killed his father) so he works at the company store. His boss is Guy Henson who, beside running the store is also the village constable. He also is a former millworker, but experiences in the Great War left him unable to tolerate loud noises.
When Sam finds a woman drowned in the river, dyed purple from the weekly dumping of a mill vat, Henson has to find out what happened. Sam, a dedicated reader of Black Mask, is thrilled to be able to participate.
I should say I didn't think the ending of this story was as strong as the rest of it. But McAbee gives us a strong sense of what life was like in a town where the mill owner set the rules and could throw you out of your home on a whim. I hope to see more of Guy and Sam.
Last week I said my favorite story was all about setting. And here we are again.
McAbee's story won the Black Orchid Novella Award, given each year bu AHMM and the Wolfe Pack for a novella that best carries on the Rex Stout tradition. The winners usually have a Nero Wolfe/Archie Goodwin format, meaning a great detective and an assistant narrates the story. This is true in "Dyed to Death," but as I said, it is the setting that is the true main character.
It is the late twenties in a company town somewhere in the south. Our narrator is Sam, a boy in his late teens. He never recovered from an injury in the cotton mill when he was fifteen (the same mill killed his father) so he works at the company store. His boss is Guy Henson who, beside running the store is also the village constable. He also is a former millworker, but experiences in the Great War left him unable to tolerate loud noises.
When Sam finds a woman drowned in the river, dyed purple from the weekly dumping of a mill vat, Henson has to find out what happened. Sam, a dedicated reader of Black Mask, is thrilled to be able to participate.
I should say I didn't think the ending of this story was as strong as the rest of it. But McAbee gives us a strong sense of what life was like in a town where the mill owner set the rules and could throw you out of your home on a whim. I hope to see more of Guy and Sam.
Sunday, May 31, 2015
The Monkey's Ghost, by Rosalind Barden
"The Monkey's Ghost," by Rosalind Barden, in History and Mystery, Oh My!, edited by Sarah E. Glenn, Mystery and History, LLC, 2015.
The publisher's sent me a copy of this book for free.
This story is mostly about setting, if you stretch setting to include the minor characters, which I think you can.
The narrator grew up during the depression in the Bunker Hill neighborhood of Los Angeles.
To live there was the height of fashion in the Gay Nineties of the previous century,. The prominent families of the day decorated Bunker Hill's steep streets with colorful candy-like fantasies of Victorian homes.
But by the 1930s the area had fallen on hard times and the narrator and her family live in an apartment building surrounded by these old homes and some old, eccentric neighbors. One of them (according to a local gossip, an elderly magician) was the only child of a wealthy man, and she married a scoundrel who abandoned her. But first he bought her a monkey, and the story goes, one day she threw the ape out the window, killing it. Or maybe the monkey was already dead. Or maybe it wasn't a monkey...
Naturally the local kids become obsessed with this strange story. I did not expect the outcome. This was a fun read.
The publisher's sent me a copy of this book for free.
This story is mostly about setting, if you stretch setting to include the minor characters, which I think you can.
The narrator grew up during the depression in the Bunker Hill neighborhood of Los Angeles.
To live there was the height of fashion in the Gay Nineties of the previous century,. The prominent families of the day decorated Bunker Hill's steep streets with colorful candy-like fantasies of Victorian homes.
But by the 1930s the area had fallen on hard times and the narrator and her family live in an apartment building surrounded by these old homes and some old, eccentric neighbors. One of them (according to a local gossip, an elderly magician) was the only child of a wealthy man, and she married a scoundrel who abandoned her. But first he bought her a monkey, and the story goes, one day she threw the ape out the window, killing it. Or maybe the monkey was already dead. Or maybe it wasn't a monkey...
Naturally the local kids become obsessed with this strange story. I did not expect the outcome. This was a fun read.
Sunday, May 24, 2015
A Theory of Murder, by Dennis Palumbo
"A Theory of Murder," by Dennis Palumbo, in And All Our Yesterdays, edited by Andrew MacRae, Darkhouse Books, 2015.
Mea culpa: It took me so long to get around to reading this book that I forgot how I received it. I should say it was a gift from the publisher.
Wish I'd thought of that.
It's Bern, Switzerland, 1904. Hector, a clerk in the patent office, is suspected of a series of grisly murders. Luckily a friend of his, also a patent clerk, is looking into the crimes. And Albert Einstein is a pretty bright guy...
You may know that 1905 was the "Annus Mirabilis" in which Einstein published four papers that turned Physics on its head. In this story we see him pondering on some of these points, providing some of the most amusing moments.
For example, he shows up at Hector's house in the middle of the night:
"My God, Albert, do you know the time?"
"More intimately than most, I promise you."
A very clever story.
Mea culpa: It took me so long to get around to reading this book that I forgot how I received it. I should say it was a gift from the publisher.
Wish I'd thought of that.
It's Bern, Switzerland, 1904. Hector, a clerk in the patent office, is suspected of a series of grisly murders. Luckily a friend of his, also a patent clerk, is looking into the crimes. And Albert Einstein is a pretty bright guy...
You may know that 1905 was the "Annus Mirabilis" in which Einstein published four papers that turned Physics on its head. In this story we see him pondering on some of these points, providing some of the most amusing moments.
For example, he shows up at Hector's house in the middle of the night:
"My God, Albert, do you know the time?"
"More intimately than most, I promise you."
A very clever story.
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