Monday, November 18, 2024

Aubrey Nye Hamilton Reviews: Crimes Against Nature, Editor Robert Lopresti


With an unprecedented hurricane in the Appalachian Mountains that no one could have expected and wildfires in the West and rampant deforestation in many states, no one can say that the environment and the damage caused by humans does not affect our lives. Robert Lopresti has collected and edited a set of 15 short stories all about human impact on nature. Sometimes thoughtless, sometimes deliberate, the impact of the destruction is the same.

The authors in Crimes Against Nature (Down & Out Books, 2024) are well known and recognized for their skill in crime fiction, which shows to great advantage in this assortment of mayhem. Instead of offenses against people, the misdeeds here are against the earth. Michael Bracken, Susan Breen, Sarah M. Chen, Barb Goffman, Karen Harrington, Janice Law, R.T. Lawton, Robert Lopresti, Jon McGoran, Josh Pachter, Gary Phillips, S.J. Rozan, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Mark Stevens, and David Heska Wanbli Weiden have each contributed a story. They also have selected a conservation nonprofit to receive half of the royalties. Their chosen charity is described at the end of each story; I was glad to learn about a few groups unfamiliar to me.

The stories are as varied as the charities that will benefit from them. Some of the protagonists use their native guile to defend the environment, others are not above committing a felony for the same reason. One protagonist continued to battle for the earth’s welfare beyond the grave.

I am charmed by the number of devious old ladies here. In Chin Yong-Yun Plants a Seed, a grandmother saves her grandchildren’s school plot of carefully selected native plants and arranges for a nearby factory to be brought to account for its illegal emissions in one fell swoop. We have all had dreadful neighbors but Emily Kitchener takes drastic steps to deal with those who destroy an established native species garden in Heavenly Bamboo. Annabelle addresses the problem of the marijuana-smoking neighbors who create a second-hand smoke hazard for the nearby residents, including a cat, in Gone to Pot. A committed recycler goes to great effort to see that her apartment complex complies with the reprocessing sorting rules in The Trouble with Saving the World.

Then there are the destructive tourists who in their desire to see nature in its pristine state destroy it as they explore. Eruptions discusses a tour group scaling an active volcano in defiance of the police in beautiful Costa Rica, where the fragile habitat is being wrecked by excessive tourism. A social media darling, an influencer who films everything he does, is the subject of The Gift. This particular influencer trespasses on private beaches and encourages his followers to do the same, leaving a tsunami of trash as they go. A man bent on revenge goes after several media influencers who damage delicate ecosystems and invade protected reserves in Bad Influence.

Virgil Wounded Horse of the acclaimed novel Winter Counts is still looking out for the people on the Rose Bud reservation in Wind Spirits. When an activist comes in, agitating for trouble over the wind turbines set up on the land, Virgil steps in.

The Smart One focuses on the worst possible consequences of careless disposal of toxic materials. Scrap Heap is set in a metals recycling plant that ignored federal regulations for decades; the protagonist here is the most original I have seen in a long time. Illegal dumping of used oil is the environmental crime in Todd’s Fault, Todd is a dog for anyone who needs a dog in their reading, and Stinkwater Lake addresses the dangers of emptied oil wells left unremediated.

Firestorm describes an enterprising felon’s creation of a storage unit to preserve artwork and other valuables from the wildfires that are endemic in the West these days.

An earnest do-gooder decides to single-handedly reduce the number of meth labs polluting the groundwater, wells, and rivers in Lenny and the Lab. This is the funniest entry in the book.

Body Parts and Bathtub Rings deals with the drought in the Southwest and the people who refuse to accept that the need to conserve water is past urgent.

This is a fascinating collection of stories with as diverse a set of protagonists and plots as I can remember seeing. The annual major gift-giving season is upon us and this book would be welcomed by any crime fiction reader who also champions ecological causes. I found it informative and entertaining, and I expect they would too. Recommended.

 

·         Publisher: Down & Out Books (October 6, 2024)

·         Language: English

·         Paperback: 294 pages

·         ISBN-10: 1643963805

·         ISBN-13: 978-1643963808


 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4i2Ud9g


Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2024

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

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