Thursday, March 31, 2022
The Reading Room: Widowland by C.J. Carey: Reading Room Review
Wednesday, March 09, 2022
Short Story Wednesday Review: Flash And Bang: A Short Mystery Fiction Society Anthology Edited by J. Alan Hartman
From the massive archive…
After watching
the success of anthologies from other writers groups have had in recent months,
the members of the Short Mystery Fiction Society embarked on their own
anthology. Over three hundred entries were whittled down to the final nineteen
tales showcased in the book. Variety is the key in Flash And Bang: A Short
Mystery Fiction Society Anthology. Edited by J. Alan Hartman, the read features
tales that cross time as well as space in terms of geographic locations.
After a short
introduction by current SMFS President Jan Christensen, it is on to the
stories. Herschel Cozine leads things off with his flash tale “The Perfect
Crime.” Imagine, if you will, all of the
great fictional detectives gathered together to discuss one case.
Bobbie A.
Chukran comes next with “The Conflagration at the Nameless Cotton Gin.” The
title easily enough explains what happened, but the why of the event is a bit
more complicated.
“Murder on Elm
Street” by Su Kopil comes next with a tale where a power outage on a brutally
cold night drives nearby neighbors to the one house that has power. It is
fitting on a night such as this that it is time for a twenty-two year old cold
case to be finally solved.
P. A. Devoe
takes readers back in time to a China of long ago in “Fireworks (From Judge
Lu’s Ming Dynasty Case Files)". During the annual celebration of the monk
Li Tian and his invention of fireworks, Lu is informed there has been a death
at the nearby shop of the Lie brothers out on Xiao Di Road. The accident
requires the immediate attention and investigation by Judge Lu.
Receiving
unwanted attention from a bag lady is not a good thing. Even if she does give
good advice in “The Bag Lady” by Laurie Stevens.
The chaos of a
rapidly moving wildfire might be the perfect time to murder someone and get
away with it. Tim Wohlforth examines the possibilities in “Sierra Noir.”
The Vikings have
harnessed steam power in this alternative history mystery titled “Thor’s
Breath” by Suzanne Berube Rorhus. It is the year of the Christian Lord 627, and
this small area of coastal Norway has one mechanical healer by the name of
Hamarr. He is possession of a magical new material from the Far East that has
wonderfully intriguing possibilities if it can be harnessed.
Debbie and her
companion, Arthur, have a job to do at Detweiller Industries. “Arthur” by
Sandra Murphy is a clever and fun story that takes a little while to figure
out.
The morning
after is rough for Keith in “Fractured Memories” by Julie Tollefson. Andrea’s
latest Fourth of July party was a real blast and Keith is paying the price.
Somebody else paid a far bigger price due to last night’s events in this
complicated tale.
A hostage
situation that is gradually getting worse is at work in “Don’t Let the Cop into
the House” by O’Neil De Noux. The small brick home in Lakeview was flooded
during Katrina and was put back together. Somehow the police now have to save
homeowner Mike Agrippa, who is drowning in his own way.
When men want
protection money the elderly grandmother has few choices in “Rosie’s Choice” by
John M. Floyd. These are not the kind of customers she needs in the store the
day before Independence Day.
Readers again go
back in time in the next story. “Don’t Be Cruel” by Joanne Lucas takes readers
to June 1957 in Fresno, California where Homicide Detective Frank Ransom has a
new case. Ransom thinks of movies quite a lot and sees the world as a movie
scenario. Before he can make it all fade to black he needs to figure out who
killed the woman in the diner and why.
Brigid Morgan is
the client and she claims somebody is blackmailing her over some very adult
pictures that were taken 15 years ago. As the new CEO of an internet search
engine company she knows that once she starts paying it will never end in “A
Simple Job” by Andrew MacRae. She has a plan and first she needs the identity
of the blackmailer.
Twenty years
later, Carly is back to the Quick ‘N Slow Diner located close to the nearby
cabins. As a child, she came there with her family when they rented out one of
the cabins. In trying to find herself, Carly unwittingly finds much more about
others in “Beautiful Killer” by Judy Penz Sheluk.
Being a hooker
is a tough job, but finding your client dead in a bed is a real problem. So too
is the female already in the room in “The Fruit of Thy Loins” by Albert Tucher.
Good thing Diana can fight and knows at least one good cop.
The small town
of Sentry, Texas is the location for “The Raymond Chandler Con” by Earl Staggs.
Murder is not supposed to happen in a small town such as Sentry, which is why
Police Chief Harry Phillips left the job in Dallas and came here. The murder
victim’s best friend, Martha Robinson, has no police experience, but she reads
a lot of mysteries. She has an idea how to solve the case with or without
Harry’s help.
No one ever
takes notice of the janitor as he or she goes about doing a very necessary job.
The person doing the cleaning blends into the background. Such is the case here
in “The Wrong Girl” by Barb Goffman, where the janitor overhears a plot by
three teens at an elite private school.
It has been
three weeks, the ransom was paid quite some time ago, and the child still has
not been returned in “Silent Measures” by BV Lawson. Scott Drayco, a private
consultant, has been brought in to help find the boy who vanished from his
boarding school.
A tale
translated by Willem Verhulst is the final entry in the anthology. “A Day Like
No Other” by Walter A. P. Soethoudt follows a Lieutenant Belloc as he goes
through his day in Antwerp while thinking about the past and the many changes
in the city.
Short author
bios for the contributors bring the read to a close.
While not every
story in the book is an actual obvious mystery, all of the stories have a
mystery at the core. Some are more mysteries of the mind where characters think
about their past actions and the resulting ramifications, while other tales are
very much in the moment where one can smell the blood on the floor and the
cordite in the air. Filled with interesting tales of complicated characters
dealing with events in their lives, Flash And Bang: A Short Mystery
Fiction Society Anthology brings a pleasant read by way of a variety of
stories. As in other anthologies, each reader will have his or her own personal
favorites among the 170 pages, but all the tales presented are good ones in
their own way.
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4ipEuAl
While I am a writer as well as a member of the Short Mystery Fiction Society, I did not submit a story for this anthology. Material supplied by the publisher in exchange for my objective review.
Kevin R. Tipple
©2015, 2022
Friday, December 11, 2020
FFB Review: Leviathan by Chuck Regan
Earlier this week, my December 2016 review of Leviathan by Chuck Regan came up as a memory deal on Facebook. Even though this great book seems to only be available in print and by third party sellers, I decided to run my review today for FFB. It was/is a heck of a good read. Also make sure to check out the reads suggested today by Patti Abbott and Audrey Nye Hamilton.
In an alternative world
where Germany won the war and used a V-2 rocket or missile to destroy New York City
with a nuclear weapon, Leviathan tells the tale of a few individuals
in occupied America. In April of 1945, Norm Cromwell was in the sixth
grade and on a field trip a little ways outside NYC when it was destroyed. He
did not realize that he was seeing the rocket trail as the weapon came over the
horizon and hit the city. His parents were back home in Pittsburg so they were not
on the bus with him or the others in his group.
By October of 1962,
Norm is an adult working and living in Philadelphia. One of the many adults
crammed into a row house they live and work in an environment totally under
German control. They are classified as “citizen workers” and have every second
of their lives monitored. The Bundespolizei (BP) are the Gestapo of the Occupied
America Branch of the Third Reich and they use informants and technology to
control everyone and everything. Drone minizeps, shaped like small pigs and
carrying cameras and other surveillance gear, monitor from the air while ground
troops everywhere monitor things. Then there are the informants who may be
friends and might be capable of lying just to get socks, extra rations, and
other benefits.
There are resistance
groups far beyond Philadelphia, according to rumor, but Norm has no plans to be
a part of that. He tries to not think about his parents back home in Pittsburgh
and has no idea if they are alive or dead. In a world where a smile can get you
gunned down by the BP, Norm keeps his head down and does what he is told.
That is until at the
end of the workday on this one particular day when all heck breaks
loose. In the resulting melee Norm, Alan, and Floyd do something that is
unforgivable. Forced to flee, they have no choice, but to go on the run to
survive.
Author
Chuck Ragan has created a very atmospheric and intense alternative history tale
with Leviathan.
As Mr. Regan makes clear in the introduction, the tale is designed off of
several key changes to events during what we know as WW2. It isn’t meant to be
a scholarly treatise on might have been. Instead, Leviathan is simply a
pulp read of dystopian fiction set in an alternative history timeline. It
is also very good.
Material supplied by the publisher in exchange for my objective review.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2016, 2020
Saturday, May 02, 2020
Bitter Tea and Mystery Review: Westside by W. M. Akers
Thursday, December 08, 2016
Review: Leviathan by Chuck Regan
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
Review: "Flash And Bang: A Short Mystery Fiction Society Anthology" Edited by J. Alan Hartman
enough explains what happened, but the why of the event is a bit more complicated.
Flash And Bang: A Short Mystery Fiction Society Anthology


