The first issue of Switchblade is an
intriguing mix of both noir and hard boiled fiction. The anthology is divided into
two parts consisting of flash fiction and short fiction. Per the introduction
written by editor Scotch Rutherford, the tales in this magazine share a common
goal of killing political correctness as violently as possible while also
entertaining the reader. Both goals are easily met in the first issue. Sensitive
readers are warned that there is extensive use of adult language and/or adult
situations. There is nothing cozy happening in these tales.
The flash section opens with an author
who has been a long time favorite of this reviewer, Paul D. Brazill. His tales
always feature characters in the thick of their own mess and Tony Fowler in “Getting
Away With It” fits the bill from the first sentence. Crashing a stolen BMW is
bad enough and then things really go downhill.
Jim J. Wilsky is up next with “Gut
Wrenching.” Wayne Lee Parsons really needs a doctor. A towel and some duct tape
are just not going to get the job done.
Prison taught Bobbie a few things. Max
has questions in “Re-election” by Fred Zackel.
Daylight shinning into a bar is never a
pretty sight and the Rumkey is no
exception in “Primed” by Scotch Rutherford. Johnny owing Max instead is not an upgrade or
is going to make things any better. Not there is any real choice for him or
anyone else.
A kangaroo, a car, and a lot more is
involved in the very short tale, “Urban Legend #223” by Susan Cornford.
After those five flash tales, it is on
to the longer fare in the fiction section. The section opens with “The Stooge”
by Tom Leins. Bradley Loomis is insane and needs to be put down like some sort
of crazed wild animal. You have to do a lot of unsavory things working
undercover and dealing with Loomis is just one of many.
Dave Williams died under the overpass last
night. He was homeless. His family should know what happened in “Rats” by Liam
Sweeny. The real world threw casted Dave out before the same thing happened to
our narrator. He owes it to Dave to share his story.
Henry Eddie Nova has been coming to the
home in Grosse Pointe to give the kid lessons for eight weeks now. He is
supposed to be teaching the kid how to play in “That’s All Right Mama” by Steve
Liskow. If the kid would practice, that would help. Everybody knows Henry Eddie
Nova can play the guitar like nobody’s business. But, the kid is just not
getting it.
The bright red Ferrari makes quite the
statement in “A Taste For Danger” by Lawrence Kelter. So do two wise guys that
step out of the car. Two of the biggest dirt bags Bensonhurst had ever produced
are coming down the pier and getting on the boat. The Clip Joint is about to head into the evening sea with those two
wise guys, a few other folks, and the latest batch of very expensive call
girls.
There are submerged cars up and down
Buffalo Bayou in Houston. Normally our narrator would be doing underwater work
at oil rigs out in the Gulf. Then the layoff happened. The divorce happened.
Now he is checking the cars for dead bodies and more in “The Apex Predator” by
William Dylan Powell.
Nabih always makes a point to give Mr.
K the nastiest twenty dollar bills he has. If he could find some cholera he
would dip the twenties into that first before handing them over. He has his
reasons in “North Creek Brown” by Preston Lang.
There are seven folks hanging out at
the bar. Most of them are the regulars except for the stranger nursing his beer
at a table in the back. Then the woman and her friend walk in and things start
getting weird in “Stranger In A Bar” by Travis Richardson.
It is a cold night in Detroit and the
casino has damn near cleaned out our narrator. He has five quarters left in “Killing
Time So I Can Dig Myself A Deeper Grave” by Jack Bates. Then the old man shows
up at the doors of The Big Wheel Casino.
He just needs a little help in a tale that brings the first issue to a fitting
close.
Switchblade: Issue 1, Volume 1 is a quality issue of gritty hard edged short stories. These
are tales frequently filled with adult language and adult situations so
sensitive readers should look elsewhere. These tales involve situations where things
are headed sideways at best and into a wine filled gutter streaked with the
blood of you and your enemies at worst.
While some folks have publicly complained
about sloppy editing, I don’t agree. Most of what they are complaining about is
actually stylistic choices made by the authors involved to tell their tales. My
only complaint would be the very small typeface. Difficult to read on the iPad
and nearly impossible to read in the Kindle for PC program, the typeface
resisted all of my efforts to enlarge it.
If you like your reading with violence
and dark edges, Switchblade: Issue 1, Volume 1 is definitely for you.
Switchblade: Issue 1, Volume 1
Editor
Scotch Rutherford
Caledonia
Press
April
2017
ASIN: B0718SWXZ9
eBook
(also available in Print)
110
Pages
$2.99
Material
was picked up to read and review during a promotion by way of funds in my
Amazon Associate account.
Kevin
R. Tipple ©2018
2 comments:
Thanks for the shout out about Switchblade, Kevin. He's really got something edgy and raw going on here and I've been diggin' it. Nothing cozy indeed hahaha.
Enjoyed it quite a lot. Plan on reading more.
I have far more cozy readers than noir readers, so I was just trying to make it clear to all what style this publication was/is. No criticisms implied.
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