After a short introduction by Cullen Gallagher as to
how the anthology “Noir Riot” came into being it is on to the reads. There are
sixteen authors in the book representing twenty-three works of short stories
and poetry. The works are presented in alphabetic order of the authors led by
Ken Bruen.
“I almost had it together.
Man, I came as close to
having it sweet as it gets.
I’d like to blame
Texas, just lay it all on the home star, let me off the
hook, throw my hands
up, go
“Weren’t for this
goddamn state, I’d be in clover.” (Page 1)
Our narrator isn’t happy and that is despite the
fact he loves mysteries and is currently working through the C. J. Box cannon. He
has been in Houston for five days waiting for Ray to have a good score set up
for them. But, things are not working out right in a dark tale that, in just a
few short pages, manages to set the tone for everything to follow in the book. A
highlight of “Trophy Hunt” by Ken Bruen is the numerous references to various
figures in the mystery community.
James is back in town in “Workman’s Comp” by James
Campbell and barely hanging on. James is also is looking for a big score and
Kenny has a plan. If things go right the two could make a very nice payday in
this story set in 1962.
“A Visit to the One-Eyed Man” by Bill Crider comes
next. Ralph Merchant is well known as the “One-Eyed Man” and he does not care
that the narrator wants to finish his bowl of chili. When the man’s enforcers
show up you do as you are told.
Two poems “Dark Harvest” and “Homicide Duty Ain’t
For The Lonely” by Thomas A Crowell, Esq., followed by the poem “Frankford
Avenue” by Melanie Dante.
Then it is back to the stories with “Rothko’s
Daughter” by Richard Godwin. Two addicts find each other on a London street one
night in a tale of art, deceit, and more.
Deceit is also part of the imagery in the next piece
titled “The Other Man’s Wife” also by Richard Godwin.
Miceli’s is never crowded at lunch despite its
legendary status in “Let’s Do Lunch” by Joseph Goodrich. Larry Wynman likes to
work on scripts there white eating lunch. Normally he is left alone, but on
this day Rick Turnbull shows up to pitch an idea to he has for an upcoming
film.
The poems “Echo Park, 1949” and “The Curfew affair”
(for Ross MacDonald) by Joseph Goodrich are next.
It was just supposed to be a fun personal ad in
“Casual Encounter” by Jake Hinkson. It was a way to blow off steam. Yet it gave
the married man with a nearly dead marriage quite the adrenalin jolt to put the
ad out there. Then he got a response and the ad suddenly became very real.
While many tales in the book are set out in California,
like Ken Bruen, Paul Krueger set his tale in Texas. The notorious “last outlaw”
One-Step Grimes is just days away from his execution in “One-Step’s Last Meal.”
He wants beer and chili for his last meal which is easy enough. But, he wants
to go one step further and make the chili himself using the family’s secret
recipe.
Natasha came back to David’s place in “Sometimes the
Devil” by Daniel Moses Luft. Entranced by her east European accent, long black
hair, and a few other things about her, David has had a very good time. The
bill is about to come due in a very big way.
Poetry returns in a big way for the rest of the
book. The cheap Saturday night special is the “Bad Fun” as author Suzanne Lummis
reminds readers before considering the idea of “Wonder Woman, Private Eye.”
Next is “Kept In the Dark” by Charles Rammelkamp who
also offers “The Silent Scream.”
It is a very short poem that Stephen D. Rogers
offers with “My Dolls Hate Chicken Nuggets” but by far the most disturbing.
The poems “On Furlough” by John Ryan and “A Definition
of Noir” by Gerald So are the final two pieces of the book.
A seven page section of short bios titled “Who’s Who”
regarding the authors, editors, and graphic designer brings the 165 page book
to a close.
According to
the introduction, the title is Noir Riot because,
“Noir is
the riot. It always has and always will be.” (Page VII)
It certainly is in this
case where all the tales feature chaos and bedlam, gunfire, and the smell and
sight of blood on the ground, streets, and floors of the homes of these characters.
The blood is warm, cold, and everything in between in tales where the characters
sometimes have an idea things are going to get nasty and at other times not a
clue.
This is not a read where you end up feeling good
about yourself and things are tied off in a nice neat and positive way. No,
this is a read where it is kill or be killed, we are all doomed, and what can
appear to be a lucky break is more likely a doorway to a personally made hell
on this mortal coil.
Noir
Riot
Edited
by Lou Boxer, Cullen Gallagher, and Mathew Louis
Cover
Graphic Designer Jeff Wong
Noir
Con/Out Of The Gutter Online
September
2014
ISBN#978-0-692-29660-8
Paperback
168
Pages
$12.95
Material
supplied by Lou Boxer and Cullen Gallagher in exchange for my objective review.
Kevin
R. Tipple ©2015
4 comments:
Looks like a good book to study to learn how noir should work. Thanks for the review.
Thanks for this lead, Kevin. Looks like an interesting anthology of some unique noir writing.
regards,
John
Hope you both like the book.
Interested to check this out...
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