"Gotta Go," by Elaine Viets, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, November 2015.
Sorry this review is late. Bouchercon doth make sluggards of us all.
"If you want to be a good-looking corpse, carbon monoxide is the way to go. Your skin is a lovely shade of pink."
That helpful tip is the opening line of this story, which is intended to be the first in a series about Angela Richman, Death Investigator for a Missouri county. In this tale she is looking into the apparent suicide of a wealthy woman, found in her car in a closed garage. The detective in charge of the case is an "errorist," a lazy cop who makes a lot of mistakes. He wants to wrap up this obvious suicide before he goes off-shift. Angela has a couple of hours to find evidence that the death was (surprise!) murder.
The story is full of detail, and has a fair-play ending.
Tuesday, October 13, 2015
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Mess With The Bull, Get The Horn, by Michael Terlecki
"Mess With The Bull, Get The Horn," by Michael Terlecki, in Destination: Mystery, edited by Andrew MacRae, Dark House Books, 2015.
Thomas Gavel had a dream job designing slot machines. Things go wrong when he visits Las Vegas and gets suckered in a high stakes poker game. The bad guys say all he has to do to pay off his debt is design a slot machine they can use to get rich with. But the casino guys will catch any kind of payout pattern. Can he do it?
The moral of the story is: don't mess with engineers.
Thomas Gavel had a dream job designing slot machines. Things go wrong when he visits Las Vegas and gets suckered in a high stakes poker game. The bad guys say all he has to do to pay off his debt is design a slot machine they can use to get rich with. But the casino guys will catch any kind of payout pattern. Can he do it?
The moral of the story is: don't mess with engineers.
Sunday, September 27, 2015
The Discovery, by Meg Opperman
"The Discovery," by Meg Opperman, in Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine, Issue 18, 2015.
Celeste is a young woman studying at a university in her native Venezuela. She meets an American professor named Robert, marries him, and moves to Washington, D.C. Things go downhill from there.
Robert is a classic abusive, controlling, husband. Celeste's every move is watched, her phone calls monitored. When her bus home is late she is beaten.
My favorite line in the story? Reaching into a hand-carved box, I sort through the gold jewelry and select Robert's latest apology.
But what makes this story more than just a tale of domestic misery is that each scene is prefaced with a quotation from Christopher Columbus's letters or logbooks, describing his encounters with the natives of the new world. It is no accident that Celeste and Robert get married on Columbus Day. I can't imagine how much work went into finding the appropriate texts for each scene.
Very moving story.
Celeste is a young woman studying at a university in her native Venezuela. She meets an American professor named Robert, marries him, and moves to Washington, D.C. Things go downhill from there.
Robert is a classic abusive, controlling, husband. Celeste's every move is watched, her phone calls monitored. When her bus home is late she is beaten.
My favorite line in the story? Reaching into a hand-carved box, I sort through the gold jewelry and select Robert's latest apology.
But what makes this story more than just a tale of domestic misery is that each scene is prefaced with a quotation from Christopher Columbus's letters or logbooks, describing his encounters with the natives of the new world. It is no accident that Celeste and Robert get married on Columbus Day. I can't imagine how much work went into finding the appropriate texts for each scene.
Very moving story.
Sunday, September 20, 2015
Three LIttle Words, by Nancy Pickard
"Three Little Words," by Nancy Pickard, in Mystery Writers of America present Manhattan Mayhem, edited by Mary Higgins Clark, Quirk,2015.
Priscilla Windsor is a poor little rich girl. Not only does she come from a horrible wealthy family, but on the first page she discovers that she is about to die. "Death could only improve my life, she thought, and giggled wildly again."
Her long-time doctor, Sam Waterford, suggests she make a bucket list. Priscilla's has only one item: TELL THE TRUTH.
Three days later, she is murdered. Sam feels obliged to look into, not her death so much as her life. What he finds is disturbing, but does it include the motive for murder?
A lot of twists in here, including one I found unsatisfactory, but a very nice story anyway.
Priscilla Windsor is a poor little rich girl. Not only does she come from a horrible wealthy family, but on the first page she discovers that she is about to die. "Death could only improve my life, she thought, and giggled wildly again."
Her long-time doctor, Sam Waterford, suggests she make a bucket list. Priscilla's has only one item: TELL THE TRUTH.
Three days later, she is murdered. Sam feels obliged to look into, not her death so much as her life. What he finds is disturbing, but does it include the motive for murder?
A lot of twists in here, including one I found unsatisfactory, but a very nice story anyway.
Sunday, September 13, 2015
Naomi, by Christopher Rice
"Naomi," by Christopher Rice, in nEvermore!, edited by Nancy Kilpatrick and Caro Soles, EDGE, 2015.
Full disclosure: I have a story in this collection of Poe-inspired tales.
You could argue that this piece is fantasy or horror, not a mystery. And you'd be right. But a wise man (me) once pointed out that there seems to be an affinity between mysteries and ghost stories, that does not exist with vampire, zombie, etc. stories.
Besides, this is a tale of crime and revenge, which seems to be right in our wheelhouse. But enough special pleading.
Franklin, the narrator, is tormented by the recent death of his niece. Naomi, a transsexual woman, was bullied by other students at her high school and committed suicide.
Reporters wait outside the family house and demand: Mr. Franklin, did you do enough to help your niece? He doesn't respond, although he longs to say, at least you stopped calling her Nathan.
Now other students from the school have killed themselves. Copycats, is the community's first thought. Then: they were the bullies and they did it out of guilt.
But Franklin, a gay man who attended the same school, is convinced that kids like that never feel guilt or remorse. So what - or who - is causing their deaths?
The answer? Well, let's say this is a thoroughly modern ghost story, and a very good one.
Full disclosure: I have a story in this collection of Poe-inspired tales.
You could argue that this piece is fantasy or horror, not a mystery. And you'd be right. But a wise man (me) once pointed out that there seems to be an affinity between mysteries and ghost stories, that does not exist with vampire, zombie, etc. stories.
Besides, this is a tale of crime and revenge, which seems to be right in our wheelhouse. But enough special pleading.
Franklin, the narrator, is tormented by the recent death of his niece. Naomi, a transsexual woman, was bullied by other students at her high school and committed suicide.
Reporters wait outside the family house and demand: Mr. Franklin, did you do enough to help your niece? He doesn't respond, although he longs to say, at least you stopped calling her Nathan.
Now other students from the school have killed themselves. Copycats, is the community's first thought. Then: they were the bullies and they did it out of guilt.
But Franklin, a gay man who attended the same school, is convinced that kids like that never feel guilt or remorse. So what - or who - is causing their deaths?
The answer? Well, let's say this is a thoroughly modern ghost story, and a very good one.
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Meet and Greet, by Ian Rankin
"Meet and Greet," by Ian Rankin, The Strand Magazine, July-October 2015.
Sometimes you wonder where an author possibly got the idea for a story. In the case of this clever tale I think we can all make a guess.
Peppard and Jarman have a plan to make some quick dishonest cash. Go to an airport and imitate the drivers who stand, holding signs, waiting for passengers to get off planes. Collect the passenger before the real driver does, whisk him away and rob him. A sure thing.
Well, if you have read any crime fiction at all, you know a sure thing is sure to go all to hell. The reason this made my favorites list is the clever, and perfectly logical twist at the very end.
Sometimes you wonder where an author possibly got the idea for a story. In the case of this clever tale I think we can all make a guess.
Peppard and Jarman have a plan to make some quick dishonest cash. Go to an airport and imitate the drivers who stand, holding signs, waiting for passengers to get off planes. Collect the passenger before the real driver does, whisk him away and rob him. A sure thing.
Well, if you have read any crime fiction at all, you know a sure thing is sure to go all to hell. The reason this made my favorites list is the clever, and perfectly logical twist at the very end.
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Solo for Shoehorn, by John H. Dirckx
"Solo for Shoehorn," by John H. Dirckx, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, October 2015.
For many years Dirckx has been creating a dependable series of private eye stories for AHMM about Detective (recently Lieutenant) Cyrus Auburn, set in a midwestern city.
The tale begins when Auburn meets Walter Bottrace, a seventy-five year old man with a mobile van full of vintage LPs and 45s for sale. When Bottrace is found killed in the woods with a passel of fake IDs, Auburn uncovers a complicated scheme of robberies that have more to do with drugs and, yes, shoehorns, than music.
What makes the stories work are mostly the characters and how they are described. There is a regular cast, each of whom gets their scene on stage. For example, evidence tech Kestrel dislikes Stamaty, the coroner's clerk who slows down his work, and in this episode he calls him "the Last Responder."
For many years Dirckx has been creating a dependable series of private eye stories for AHMM about Detective (recently Lieutenant) Cyrus Auburn, set in a midwestern city.
The tale begins when Auburn meets Walter Bottrace, a seventy-five year old man with a mobile van full of vintage LPs and 45s for sale. When Bottrace is found killed in the woods with a passel of fake IDs, Auburn uncovers a complicated scheme of robberies that have more to do with drugs and, yes, shoehorns, than music.
What makes the stories work are mostly the characters and how they are described. There is a regular cast, each of whom gets their scene on stage. For example, evidence tech Kestrel dislikes Stamaty, the coroner's clerk who slows down his work, and in this episode he calls him "the Last Responder."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)