From the magnificently massive archive….
The dark side of
technology is often reported in the day’s news. The modern problem of identify
theft was a topic long ago covered in classic science fiction. With such
problems and others being daily fodder for the media which seems to be driven
by sensationalism these days, it isn’t surprising that authors in other genres
are going to explore the positives and the negatives of technology. The mystery
field, out of the remaining genres, seems to be not only the most suited to do
so, but the genre leading the pack in the form of novels, anthologies, and
collections.
Case in point is
the recent anthology release, Techno-Noir, edited by Eva Batonne
and Jeffrey Marks. In the book, which contains eighteen stories by as many
authors, the roles of technology, morality, deceit and consequences are
considered. Some authors and the resulting stories play on the classic
stereotypes in the mystery field and twist them while others go in a different
direction. A couple of works contain some humor but most of the stories in the
anthology are deadly serious as is subject matter. Like all anthologies, it’s
hard to go into detail on all the strong stories so just a couple will be
covered here.
One that really jumps out is “Suspicion” by Leann Sweeney. Keeping one’s mental health secret is important because even the paranoids do have enemies.
“Cookie Monster”
by Tim Wohlforth also stands out for divine retribution on a dishonest computer
salesman.
Driven by
memories that won’t let go, “All the World is a Stage” by Rick McMahan also
works very well and gives the reader a lasting image.
That isn’t to say the other authors, Libby Fischer Hellmann, Nick Andreychuk, Michael Bracken, Earl Staggs, Eva Batonne, Stephen D. Rogers, J. Michael Blue, Flora Davis, Bill Crider, Jeffrey Marks, Arla Gregory, Linda Posey, Kris Neri, H. Robert Perry, and Vera-Jane Goodin didn’t contribute excellent stories. They did. But any reader, or reviewer for that matter, is going to have personal favorites. The above are mine. Your experience will vary.
Kevin R. Tipple © 2005, 2010, 2022
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