"Kaddish for Lazar," by Michael Wuliger, in Berlin Noir, edited by Thomas Wörtche, Akashic Press, 2019.
The publisher sent me an advance copy of this book.
"You're Jewish, aren't you?" the editor of Blitz Magazine asked me.
"Yes, I am." I felt uncomfortable. "Why do you want to know?" That kind of question coming from Germans irritates me. It runs in the family, I guess.
"Then you must have known Mark Lazar well," he said.
Because obviously all 30,000 of the Jews in Berlin must know each other, right?
Great opening for this story in which a freelance journalist is asked to look into the death by drowning of a prominent politician. Suicide, accident, or something else? Could his death be related to his immigrating from Russia after the Soviet Union fell? Or to his plans to run for mayor?
The investigation is very interesting, the effect it has on the narrator even more so. This is a very cynical story, which makes it very noir indeed.
Tuesday, April 16, 2019
Monday, April 8, 2019
Dora, by Zöe Beck
"Dora," by Zöe Beck, in Berlin Noir, edited by Thomas Wörtche, Akashic Press, 2019.
Big typo corrected. Apologies.
This is the second appearance here by Beck.
Take a look at her. Even if it's hard.
You won't want to look at her because she stinks and is filthy from head to toe. You think you know what you'll see but take a look anyway.
That's how the story starts. It seems like a bit of sociological fiction, an analysis of a mentally ill homeless person. But there's a lot more going on here.
The narrator is Dora's brother. He explains in detail how his sister's life has slowly derailed and the damage it has done to the whole family.
And then, well, things happen. Linda Landrigan, editor of Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, once said, as I recall, that she likes stories that turn out to be something different than they appear. I suppose that is almost but not identical to a twist ending. Read "Dora" for an excellent example.
Big typo corrected. Apologies.
This is the second appearance here by Beck.
Take a look at her. Even if it's hard.
You won't want to look at her because she stinks and is filthy from head to toe. You think you know what you'll see but take a look anyway.
That's how the story starts. It seems like a bit of sociological fiction, an analysis of a mentally ill homeless person. But there's a lot more going on here.
The narrator is Dora's brother. He explains in detail how his sister's life has slowly derailed and the damage it has done to the whole family.
And then, well, things happen. Linda Landrigan, editor of Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, once said, as I recall, that she likes stories that turn out to be something different than they appear. I suppose that is almost but not identical to a twist ending. Read "Dora" for an excellent example.
Sunday, March 31, 2019
In The Court of the Lion King, by Mark Dapin
"In The Court of the Lion King," by Mark Dapin, in Sydney Noir, edited by John Dale, Akashic Press, 2019.
The publisher sent me an advance proof of this book.
I have read novels with less plot than this story. Somehow Dapin manages to keep all the balls in the air.
The narrator, Chevy, is a half-Laotian architect. He is on remand - that is, in prison awaiting trial - because the police think he killed his best friend, Jamie. A security camera caught them fighting, and Jamie hasn't been seen since.
Fortunately, Chevy has a lawyer. Jesse is his former lover and a very complicated person. ("I used to say that I only loved for people -- two of them were Jesse...") Unfortunately, no aspects of her personality involve legal skills.
And then there are the Vietnamese in the prison that want him dead, apparently because he is Laotian.
I haven't even mentioned the Lion King, a gang boss who runs the cell block. He is a truly disgusting person and is taking an unhealthy interest in our hero.
If I listed all the other threads in this tale you would think it was some kind of postmodern experimental fiction, all bits and pieces that don't connect.
Don't worry. The author knows what he's doing. But does Chevy?
The publisher sent me an advance proof of this book.
I have read novels with less plot than this story. Somehow Dapin manages to keep all the balls in the air.
The narrator, Chevy, is a half-Laotian architect. He is on remand - that is, in prison awaiting trial - because the police think he killed his best friend, Jamie. A security camera caught them fighting, and Jamie hasn't been seen since.
Fortunately, Chevy has a lawyer. Jesse is his former lover and a very complicated person. ("I used to say that I only loved for people -- two of them were Jesse...") Unfortunately, no aspects of her personality involve legal skills.
And then there are the Vietnamese in the prison that want him dead, apparently because he is Laotian.
I haven't even mentioned the Lion King, a gang boss who runs the cell block. He is a truly disgusting person and is taking an unhealthy interest in our hero.
If I listed all the other threads in this tale you would think it was some kind of postmodern experimental fiction, all bits and pieces that don't connect.
Don't worry. The author knows what he's doing. But does Chevy?
Monday, March 25, 2019
The Passenger, by Kirsten Tranter
"The Passenger," by Kirsten Tranter, in Sydney Noir, edited by John Dale, Akashic Press, 2019.
The publisher sent me an advance proof of this book which opens with a pastiche of, or homage to, a well-known crime novel. It's a very clever piece of work.
Robert has just arrived home after years overseas. He reluctantly attends a birthday party for an acquaintance named Fred. The reason for his reluctance is that Fred's daughter is Robert's former lover, who cheated with, and then married, Julian, a friend of Robert's.
Fred confides that Julian has disappeared with a trace. Perhaps Robert can inquire among their mutual friends? It turns out that that bunch had been pushers and users and Robert doesn't want to get involved with them.
But he gets drawn in and discovers some terrible stuff going in. You might say that the biggest difference between this story and the book that inspired it is the question of nature versus nurture: Which is responsible for the catastrophe that has occurred?
The publisher sent me an advance proof of this book which opens with a pastiche of, or homage to, a well-known crime novel. It's a very clever piece of work.
Robert has just arrived home after years overseas. He reluctantly attends a birthday party for an acquaintance named Fred. The reason for his reluctance is that Fred's daughter is Robert's former lover, who cheated with, and then married, Julian, a friend of Robert's.
Fred confides that Julian has disappeared with a trace. Perhaps Robert can inquire among their mutual friends? It turns out that that bunch had been pushers and users and Robert doesn't want to get involved with them.
But he gets drawn in and discovers some terrible stuff going in. You might say that the biggest difference between this story and the book that inspired it is the question of nature versus nurture: Which is responsible for the catastrophe that has occurred?
Monday, March 18, 2019
The Girls in the Fourth Row, by Doug Allyn
"The Girls in the Fourth Row," by Doug Allyn, in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine,March/April 2019.
This is Allyn's fourth appearance here.
I don't know if I would call it a subgenre exactly but there is a type of crime story known as the didactic mystery, in which the setting becomes part of the story. Dick Francis, for example, taught you something about horseracing in every book, but especially in the latter novels he would also inform you about a different industry: glassblowing, liquor, investment banking.
Doug Allyn is a form rock-and-roller and this story is about Murph, leader of an over-the-hill heavy metal, struggling to keep them all alive, functional, and headed down the road to the next paycheck. This gets complicated when, during a gig in Detroit, someone fires three shots at the lead guitarist, wiping out his Stratocaster and almost taking him with it. Or maybe the guitarist wasn't the intended target...
To get his band back on the road Murph needs to help the lieutenant dig into the past to find a potential killer, before he strikes again. A satisfying story.
This is Allyn's fourth appearance here.
I don't know if I would call it a subgenre exactly but there is a type of crime story known as the didactic mystery, in which the setting becomes part of the story. Dick Francis, for example, taught you something about horseracing in every book, but especially in the latter novels he would also inform you about a different industry: glassblowing, liquor, investment banking.
Doug Allyn is a form rock-and-roller and this story is about Murph, leader of an over-the-hill heavy metal, struggling to keep them all alive, functional, and headed down the road to the next paycheck. This gets complicated when, during a gig in Detroit, someone fires three shots at the lead guitarist, wiping out his Stratocaster and almost taking him with it. Or maybe the guitarist wasn't the intended target...
To get his band back on the road Murph needs to help the lieutenant dig into the past to find a potential killer, before he strikes again. A satisfying story.
Monday, March 11, 2019
Murder In The Second Act, by William Burton McCormick
"Murder In The Second Act," by William Burton McCormick, in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, March/April 2019.
This is the second appearance in my blog by McCormick. It is his third story about Tasia and Eleni, two young women who, with their mother, run a lodging house in Odessa at the turn of the century.
At the moment their only lodger is an actor named Oleg Olehno. He wants to hire the women as claquers, that is, members of the audience secretly paid to raise enthusiasm for a certain actor. Tasia, our narrator, doubts the ethics of such an occupation, but her sister is delighted to get paid to attend a show.
The complicating factor is the arrival of a giant - truly, an eight foot tall man - who is hunting for Oleg. Fee fie fo. Oleg explains that he borrowed money from the claquers guild in Moscow and this monstrous debt collector has been chasing him all over Russia.
Ah, but this is theatre, and theatre is all about illusion... This story is a lot of fun.
This is the second appearance in my blog by McCormick. It is his third story about Tasia and Eleni, two young women who, with their mother, run a lodging house in Odessa at the turn of the century.
At the moment their only lodger is an actor named Oleg Olehno. He wants to hire the women as claquers, that is, members of the audience secretly paid to raise enthusiasm for a certain actor. Tasia, our narrator, doubts the ethics of such an occupation, but her sister is delighted to get paid to attend a show.
The complicating factor is the arrival of a giant - truly, an eight foot tall man - who is hunting for Oleg. Fee fie fo. Oleg explains that he borrowed money from the claquers guild in Moscow and this monstrous debt collector has been chasing him all over Russia.
Ah, but this is theatre, and theatre is all about illusion... This story is a lot of fun.
Monday, March 4, 2019
What Invisible Means, by Mat Coward
"What Invisible Means," by Mat Coward, in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, March/April 2019.
I believe this is the second time this has happened, but please don't expect me to find the other example.
I refer to the fact that the same author is appearing in this space two weeks in a row. That would make sense if I was reading a collection of the author's stories, but instead he just happened to have tales in two magazines I have been reading.
This is Mat Coward's fifth appearance on my little list. As I said, his fourth was last week. Here is his winning opening:
Tuesday was a great day. Wednesday less so, of course, because that was when he got the letter saying that someone was planning to murder him, but Tuesday went better than Des could have hoped.
Apparently in England if the police have reason to believe someone is planning to kill you they are required to send you what is called an Osman letter. As D.C. Vicki explains "the Osman letter is basically to cover ourselves if your widow decides to sue us."
But in the case of Des, it is a fake letter. Someone is trying to intimidate him. Or warn him?
I'm not going into the plot here, a convoluted tale of a terrible cribbage team, a cigarette smuggler, and a perilous taxi ride. What makes Coward's work so delightful is the language.
For example, here is Vicki dealing with her very serious partner.
"How can they charge for this coffee?" [Abi] added. "I mean legally? We should be charging them for getting rid of it.
Vicki laughed. Whenever Abi said something which Vicki thought might be intended to be humorous she made a point of laughing. Which on one occasion had led to Abi not talking to her for seventy-two hours. Vicki hadn't blamed herself for that one, thought, because to be fair, "I knew she had a drink problem, I just didn't know she had a machete," doe SOUND like a joke.
Indeed it does. Very funny story.
I believe this is the second time this has happened, but please don't expect me to find the other example.
I refer to the fact that the same author is appearing in this space two weeks in a row. That would make sense if I was reading a collection of the author's stories, but instead he just happened to have tales in two magazines I have been reading.
This is Mat Coward's fifth appearance on my little list. As I said, his fourth was last week. Here is his winning opening:
Tuesday was a great day. Wednesday less so, of course, because that was when he got the letter saying that someone was planning to murder him, but Tuesday went better than Des could have hoped.
Apparently in England if the police have reason to believe someone is planning to kill you they are required to send you what is called an Osman letter. As D.C. Vicki explains "the Osman letter is basically to cover ourselves if your widow decides to sue us."
But in the case of Des, it is a fake letter. Someone is trying to intimidate him. Or warn him?
I'm not going into the plot here, a convoluted tale of a terrible cribbage team, a cigarette smuggler, and a perilous taxi ride. What makes Coward's work so delightful is the language.
For example, here is Vicki dealing with her very serious partner.
"How can they charge for this coffee?" [Abi] added. "I mean legally? We should be charging them for getting rid of it.
Vicki laughed. Whenever Abi said something which Vicki thought might be intended to be humorous she made a point of laughing. Which on one occasion had led to Abi not talking to her for seventy-two hours. Vicki hadn't blamed herself for that one, thought, because to be fair, "I knew she had a drink problem, I just didn't know she had a machete," doe SOUND like a joke.
Indeed it does. Very funny story.
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