"Milquetoast," by Olaf Kroneman, in The Strand Magazine, October 2018/January 2019.
Chances are you have met someone a bit like Colin Anderson. Chances are you didn't enjoy it much. He's the kind of middle-aged guy who invites you to dinner and makes you look at pictures of his championship college lacrosse team. Oh joy.
Colin is now a successful surgeon but he isn't interested in working hard. He prefers to spend his time being tennis and golf champion at the country club, and spending his wife's money.
But when she finds out what - or who - he is spending the money on, his life takes a sharp sudden turn.
This is a clever story that involves a phenomenon so strange I had to look it up to see if it is real. It is. The delightful twists keep coming straight to the end.
Monday, January 7, 2019
Monday, December 31, 2018
Faith, by Stuart Neville
"Faith," by Stuart Neville, in Blood Work: Remembering Gary Shulze: Once Upon A Crime, edited by Rick Ollerman, Down and Out Books, 2018.
The day I lost my belief was the same day Mrs. Garrick asked me to help kill her husband.
That's the first sentence of this story. If it doesn't make you want to read the second, my word, why are you reading fiction at all?
The narrator is an Irish clergyman, five years a widower. Mrs. Garrick's husband was brutally maimed in a terrorist attack. Our protagonist tries to comfort her and one thing leads to another.
But it isn't the request that he help murder Mr. Garrick that causes the clergyman to lose his faith. It is his conclusion that "There is no sin because there is no God. There is no God because there is only us and our impulses..."
In that case there is nothing to keep him from killing the invalid and living happily ever after with the widow. What could possibly go wrong?
A tight and surprising little tale.
The day I lost my belief was the same day Mrs. Garrick asked me to help kill her husband.
That's the first sentence of this story. If it doesn't make you want to read the second, my word, why are you reading fiction at all?
The narrator is an Irish clergyman, five years a widower. Mrs. Garrick's husband was brutally maimed in a terrorist attack. Our protagonist tries to comfort her and one thing leads to another.
But it isn't the request that he help murder Mr. Garrick that causes the clergyman to lose his faith. It is his conclusion that "There is no sin because there is no God. There is no God because there is only us and our impulses..."
In that case there is nothing to keep him from killing the invalid and living happily ever after with the widow. What could possibly go wrong?
A tight and surprising little tale.
Sunday, December 23, 2018
Devil's Island, by Mensje van Keulen
"Devil's Island," by Mensje van Keulen, in Amsterdam Noir, edited by Rene Appel and Josh Pachter, Akashic Press, 2019.
To get the Full Disclosure bit out of the way: Akashic Press sent me this book for free, for which I am grateful. One of the editors, Josh Pachter, is a friend of mine. Now on to the main course.
And what a treat it is. The narrator is trying to be helpful to his friend, Jacob, who is becoming a real pain. Jacob's girlfriend has left him and he can't seem to get over it. On one bad night he even says "I'd sell [the devil] my soul if he'd make Martha come back to me."
Later that evening they are standing among the cigarette puffers outside a pub when a stranger comes out of the smoke and asks Jacob for a light. He says that he prefers the old-fashioned wooden matches called lucifers. "I like the smell of them, though, that momentary blast of sulfur..."
This is a story built on details, cleverly used.
To get the Full Disclosure bit out of the way: Akashic Press sent me this book for free, for which I am grateful. One of the editors, Josh Pachter, is a friend of mine. Now on to the main course.
And what a treat it is. The narrator is trying to be helpful to his friend, Jacob, who is becoming a real pain. Jacob's girlfriend has left him and he can't seem to get over it. On one bad night he even says "I'd sell [the devil] my soul if he'd make Martha come back to me."
Later that evening they are standing among the cigarette puffers outside a pub when a stranger comes out of the smoke and asks Jacob for a light. He says that he prefers the old-fashioned wooden matches called lucifers. "I like the smell of them, though, that momentary blast of sulfur..."
This is a story built on details, cleverly used.
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
Seven Fiancees, by David Housewright
"Seven Fiancees," by David Housewright, in Blood Work: Remembering Gary Shulze Once Upon A Crime, edited by Rick Ollerman, Down and Out Books, 2018.
Ah, a private eye story. Pretty charming one, too.
Looking back, I probably should have let the woman shoot the tuba player, because God knows, he had it coming.
Nice opening sentence, that. P.I. Holland Taylor is in a jazz club when a young woman named Virginia tries to shoot the tubaist. Taylor prevents that. Seems tuba guy is her fiance. Seems she just found out he is also engaged to six other women.
Virginia's lawyer hires Taylor to contact the six other ladies, looking for mitigating circumstances that may help reduce his client's sentence. (Seems pretty damned mitigated to me already.) Taylor meets them, each a different personality with a different reaction to the discovery of their true love's philandering.
There is a climax of sorts, but as is so often true in life, the true joy is in the journey.
Ah, a private eye story. Pretty charming one, too.
Looking back, I probably should have let the woman shoot the tuba player, because God knows, he had it coming.
Nice opening sentence, that. P.I. Holland Taylor is in a jazz club when a young woman named Virginia tries to shoot the tubaist. Taylor prevents that. Seems tuba guy is her fiance. Seems she just found out he is also engaged to six other women.
Virginia's lawyer hires Taylor to contact the six other ladies, looking for mitigating circumstances that may help reduce his client's sentence. (Seems pretty damned mitigated to me already.) Taylor meets them, each a different personality with a different reaction to the discovery of their true love's philandering.
There is a climax of sorts, but as is so often true in life, the true joy is in the journey.
Monday, December 10, 2018
Character is Everything, by Jon McGoran
"Character is Everything," by Jon McGoran, in Unloaded Volume 2, edited by Eric Beeetner and E.A. Aymar, Down and Out Books, 2018.
And today we are in science fiction territory. At least, I hope it remains SF for a few more years.
Roscoe Boyer is an endangered species. He is the last employed writer in the world.
Roscoe had started out writing honest-to-God books, but he'd changed with the times -- video games, social media micro shorts, story interactives. Finally this.
This is creating character outlines for robots. And now Roscoe is being fired from even that job. Ah, but Roscoe has a trick up the old sleeve... A clever story.
And today we are in science fiction territory. At least, I hope it remains SF for a few more years.
Roscoe Boyer is an endangered species. He is the last employed writer in the world.
Roscoe had started out writing honest-to-God books, but he'd changed with the times -- video games, social media micro shorts, story interactives. Finally this.
This is creating character outlines for robots. And now Roscoe is being fired from even that job. Ah, but Roscoe has a trick up the old sleeve... A clever story.
Monday, December 3, 2018
Pan Paniscus, by James W. Ziskin
"Pan Paniscus," by James W. Ziskin, in Unloaded Volume 2, edited by Eric Beetner and E.A. Aymar, Down and Out Books, 2018.
The theme of these collections is simple: crimes without guns. Certainly this story has plenty of plot. Here is the first sentence:
The adolescent bonobo named Bingo escaped from the zoo in the early hours of an October morning.
Animal lovers may be glad to know that Bingo is not a crime victim. Human beings are not so lucky.
Bingo is spotted on the property of Mitch and Fiona Hirsch. Mitch is a bleeding heart liberal who annoys his law firm by working on pro bono cases. His wife Fiona is the daughter of wealth and doesn't seem to do much except drink her way through book club meetings. And then there is Evelio, their gardener. He is, not surprisingly, illegal.
When Bingo shows up unexpectedly all their lives are changed dramatically, forever....
The theme of these collections is simple: crimes without guns. Certainly this story has plenty of plot. Here is the first sentence:
The adolescent bonobo named Bingo escaped from the zoo in the early hours of an October morning.
Animal lovers may be glad to know that Bingo is not a crime victim. Human beings are not so lucky.
Bingo is spotted on the property of Mitch and Fiona Hirsch. Mitch is a bleeding heart liberal who annoys his law firm by working on pro bono cases. His wife Fiona is the daughter of wealth and doesn't seem to do much except drink her way through book club meetings. And then there is Evelio, their gardener. He is, not surprisingly, illegal.
When Bingo shows up unexpectedly all their lives are changed dramatically, forever....
Monday, November 26, 2018
Plan Z, by Travis Richardson
"Plan Z," by Travis Richardson, in Deadlines: A Tribute to William E. Wallace, edited by Chris Rhatigan and Ron Earl Phillips, Shotgun Honey, 2018.
This is the second appearance here by Richardson.
Sometimes it is 10% tale and 90% telling. This is a simple story of three guys who "decide to up their game from B&E and liquor stores." We don't learn much more about Ted, Greg, and Hector than what position they used to play back in Little League.
So this piece is not big on plot or character development. What it does have is a wonderful way of unwrapping the adventures of our unlucky trio. You see, Plan A is to rob a cash-checking joint. They throw that over for Plan B which is an armored car that Greg's Uncle Arnie drives.
But Arnie gets fired, leading to Plan C. Except Arnie shows up, drunk and demands to participate, which brings on Plan D...
Pretty funny.
This is the second appearance here by Richardson.
Sometimes it is 10% tale and 90% telling. This is a simple story of three guys who "decide to up their game from B&E and liquor stores." We don't learn much more about Ted, Greg, and Hector than what position they used to play back in Little League.
So this piece is not big on plot or character development. What it does have is a wonderful way of unwrapping the adventures of our unlucky trio. You see, Plan A is to rob a cash-checking joint. They throw that over for Plan B which is an armored car that Greg's Uncle Arnie drives.
But Arnie gets fired, leading to Plan C. Except Arnie shows up, drunk and demands to participate, which brings on Plan D...
Pretty funny.
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