After reviewing Volumes
One and Two
of the Masters Of Noir for previous
Fridays Forgotten Books hosted by Patti
Abbott segments, Barry is back today with his review of Volume Three.
MASTERS OF NOIR, Volume Three (2010)
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
The
third of four e-book collections of stories from pulp digests from the 1950s
and ’60s, this one—unlike its predecessors—provides a list of where the stories
first appeared, thus sparing me speculations. With the exception of the
Block/Lord story, which ran in Man’s
Magazine, all were published in Manhunt.
They are as follows:--
When
her regular cleaning woman doesn’t show up, Mrs. Belding calls the employment
agency and they send over Hattie. Mrs. Belding is apprehensive at first about
having a “Stranger in the House,” but
Hattie proves both zealous and efficient when it comes to getting the work
done. But this is a suspense story by Theodore Pratt from a crime fiction
periodical, so you know something sinister is going to happen.
“May I Come In?” by Fletcher Flora is a tale of madness and the desire for revenge, as
the nameless narrator recounts the death of his beloved Freda at the hands of a
pathological mass murderer named Marilla, whose trial he attends with an almost
religious fervor, feeling “the yellow hate like pus inside me.” This one is
intense.
The
skin-diving club is known as The Deep Six, although the membership has grown
considerably since it was first formed. But its atmosphere changes subtly but
noticeably when John Lash joins the group, and especially when he makes a pass
at Croy Danton’s lovely wife Betty. As a result, the term “The Killers” takes on multiple meanings in a taut, insightful
novelette by storyteller supreme John D. MacDonald.
Old
pro Phil Pennick and young Davy Wyatt have scored more heavily in the robbery
than they ever expected to, but they have to hole up because a witness saw them
shoot the bank messenger—a witness who swears she can identify them. Phil
becomes a “Cop for a Day” to prevent
that, with an unexpected surprise in a story by the exceptional Henry Slesar.
Besides
writing under his own name, Evan Hunter used several pseudonyms. In the byline
for “Attack” he’s billed as “Ed
McBain writing as Hunt Collins.” (Decades ago I read Tomorrow and Tomorrow, a science fiction novel he wrote as
Collins.) In the fast and very violent but otherwise rather simplistic story
under consideration, the nameless first-person narrator pursues the man who has
just murdered someone special to him.
“Six Fingers”
is the nickname his companions have given the awkward teenager. His friend Joey
points out a particular blonde named Cissie and asks if he likes her, and
though Six Fingers admits she’s pretty, he says he doesn’t like girls. When he
subsequently encounters Cissie one-to-one, his anxieties manifest themselves in
ways that lead to several kinds of conflict. A solid story by Hal Ellson, who
specialized in stories about juveniles.
Lawrence
Block writing as Sheldon Lord tells of another unnamed first-person narrator, a
voyeur who takes special care to avoid being caught, who’s not a pervert or sex
fiend, as the police maintained once when they caught him, but who is “Just Window Shopping.” He’s not prepared for what happens
when a beautiful woman he’s watching catches him doing so.
Private
eye Peter Chambers is in a cemetery at one a.m., contemplating the concept of
the “Precise Moment” he previously
discussed with the lovely ballerina Trina Greco, while waiting for an unknown
party to collect a package Chambers is there to deliver on behalf of his
wealthy client, Florence Fleetwood Reed. What seems like a simple errand almost
turns fatal for Chambers, thrusting him into a much bigger and more complicated
case than this initially seemed, and resulting in another precise moment, this
one of revelation. Except for author Henry Kane’s annoyingly cutesy habit of
having Chambers refer to himself as a “private richard,” this is a fast-paced,
entertaining novelette.
A
story about a police radio dispatcher sounds pretty dull, doesn’t it? Steve
Frazee disproves that with “Graveyard
Shift” in which Joe Crestone is dictated to at gunpoint by attractive model
Judith Barrows about how and what assignments he directs to patrol cars. How
can he prevent the crime she’s aiding and abetting?
Ron
Jordan is a young traffic cop who’s been on the job for a little over a year.
Having somehow developed a reputation as a ladies’ man, he’s summoned to the
inspectors’ bureau where a Captain and Homicide Chief-Inspector recruit him as “Bait for the Red-Head” in the
investigation of a beat cop’s murder. Eugene Pawley’s novelette could have been
a tad shorter, I thought, but overall it’s not a bad story.
I
neglected to point out in my reviews of its predecessors that this series, this
entry included, contains more than a few,
but not a plethora of, typos that are all too common nowadays both in e-books and physical editions. None of those I
encountered, fortunately, are severe enough to confuse or distract readers from
the generally captivating magic good storytelling engenders. So all—with one
remaining—are recommended.
© 2015
Barry Ergang
Derringer Award-winner Barry
Ergang’s written work has appeared in numerous publications, print and
electronic. Some of it is available at Amazon
and at Smashwords.
His website is http://www.writetrack.yolasite.com/.
2 comments:
This looks great! I'm ordering it.
Very cool, George.
I just set up Barry's review for Friday on Book Four of the series and discovered that Amazon does not carry it. Have no idea why they don't as they carry the preceding books.
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