It is Friday and that means Friday’s Forgotten
Books. I decided that it was a good idea to run again Barry Ergang’s 2011
review of the Short Stories of Earl Staggs. It seemed appropriate since
Earl has a Sheriff Mollie Goodall story in the new Thanksgiving
anthology put out by Untreed Reads and he has three Sheriff Mollie Goodall
stories in this book. Sheriff Goodall is a favorite of mine and reminds me a
bit of Bill Crider’s Sheriff Dan Rhodes. After you read the review and check
out Barry’s work, make sure you check out the complete list over at Patti’s blog. Surely something will
catch your eye…
SHORT
STORIES OF EARL STAGGS (2011)
Reviewed
by Barry Ergang
In the interests of full disclosure,
let me explain at the outset that Earl Staggs and I have been friends for a
number of years, going back to when I joined the staff of the then-named Futures
Mysterious Anthology Magazine as an editorial reviewer and Earl was
Managing Editor. No more than a year later, maybe less, some changes occurred
with the staff, and Earl asked if I'd like to be one of three fiction editors.
I accepted the position and, when a year or two after that Earl stepped down as
M.E. to serve as Editorial Consultant for the renamed Futures Mystery
Anthology Magazine, he offered me his former position and I accepted.
Prior to the publication of Short
Stories of Earl Staggs, I had read some of Earl's short fiction as well as
his excellent--and recommended--novel, Memory of a Murder. I correctly
assumed, therefore, that reading this collection of fifteen stories, each of
which is prefaced by an author's note about its origins, would be a satisfying
experience.
The book opens with the Derringer
Award-winning "All the Fine Actors," in which a hitman assassinates a
local sheriff. Both he and his employer are aware that people too often aren't
what they seem, and both know the collection of his fee won't be an easy
task.
"A Rainy Day Robbery" is a
lighter-weight tale about the fictional Watango County, Texas Sheriff Mollie
Goodall who, while trying to track down a thief, has to contend with a broken
fingernail, every mention of which made me wince.
A tough former Baltimore cop, now
living and working as a bail bondsman and sometime bounty hunter, returns to
his hometown to pursue an escaped criminal and confront some people and issues
from his past in "Baltimore Bounty."
"Battered" concerns
Detective Sam Hollis's rabid determination to nail a longtime abuser who has
finally killed his victim. Hollis has his own demons to deal with while trying
to salvage his marriage.
After his sister's funeral, a
visiting small-town cop arranges a meeting with her estranged husband, a
wastrel pretty boy, in "Brother-in-Law." Ostensibly to discuss which
of them as the woman's survivors gets what, the meeting has a much darker
purpose.
The weakest story in the collection
for me was "Caught On Christmas Eve," the tale of a twelve-year-old
wannabe thief and the man who witnesses what he's up to at a department store's
jewelry counter. Originally written for a Christmas anthology , it's
predictable and sentimental--but redeemed by not being too soppy.
A contract killer who prides himself
for being meticulous and thorough gets the shock of his life when a woman he
killed walks into the restaurant in which he regularly dines. Before the
evening is over, he's in for dyspepsia-inducing surprises in "Dead Woman
Walking."
"Fig Newtons and Heavy
Bags" is the lightweight tale of two spinster sisters who aren't quite
what they seem.
Another Mollie Goodall story,
"Robbery On Christmas Eve," concerns the theft of church funds from a
locked office. How the thief got in and out, as well as who the thief is, are
the puzzles Mollie must solve.
In "Room Six," a
small-town sheriff sets a simple trap to determine which of three wealthy,
spoiled brothers murdered a nineteen-year-old woman.
"Silky's Getaway" is a
brief comic tale about a professional burglar's encounter with a most unlikely
obstacle.
Not without moral qualms, a cop
exceeds standard procedural boundaries to dispense the justice the courts
failed to in "Taking Richie Gold Down."
On her daughter's wedding day,
Amanda Barnes is kidnapped by a man who has held a grudge against her for
twenty years, a man who stirs up memories of her harrowing past in the tense
and exciting "That Night in Galveston."
"The Chopsticks Clue"
resulted, as the author explains in his prefatory note, from an editorial
challenge. Homicide Lieutenant Sue Townes encounters her former partner Millie
Walker, now a meter maid, while investigating a stabbing death at a Chinese
restaurant. More interesting than the crime itself is the animosity Sue has
toward Millie because of an incident in their past.
Sheriff Mollie Goodall makes another
appearance in the comical "The Naked Man On the Roof" when she has to
talk the titular character down from the roof of a deserted icehouse (the
fall from which wouldn't kill him), learn why he's despondent, and then solve a
crime.
Chief of Police Harry Winfield
learns from a pair of Dallas cops, to his surprise and disheartenment, that Pam
Wilson is wanted for the murder of a prominent attorney in "The
Waitress." She swears she didn't kill him but knows who does--but won't
reveal the murderer's name lest she be forced to reveal things about herself
she can't afford to reveal. Harry must determine where the truth lies.
Short Stories of Earl Staggs is a nicely varied collection of light and dark, humorous
and serious, soft-boiled and hardboiled crime stories. The author writes in a
smooth, accessible prose style, delineates characters nicely, and has an
excellent sense of pace. To my friend and former colleague, the venerable Earl
of Staggs, I say, "Well done, amigo. Give us more." To you who
are reading this review, I say, "If you enjoy good short crime and mystery
fiction, get yourself a copy of this collection, which is available in
electronic and paperback formats, because the Earl Staggs byline always
guarantees a pleasurable reading experience."
Barry Ergang © 2011, 2014
Former Managing Editor of Futures Mystery Anthology Magazine and
First Senior Editor of Mysterical-E, Derringer winner Barry Ergang's
work has appeared in numerous publications, print and electronic. His website
is http://writetrack.yolasite.com/
You can find some of his written work at Amazon, Smashwords,
and Scribd.
I was briefly in a writer's group with Earl, and he's a good writer and even better guy.
ReplyDeleteTrue. I am in the same writer's group with Earl though the group has not met for a very long time.
ReplyDelete