Showing posts with label short story fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label short story fiction. Show all posts

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Wall Street Fiction (fun stuff)--


If you are fearing the worse with all the new troublesome news stories coming out about Wall Street this week, then grab a fiction book about the financial world and see if things might be better. Wall Street Noir is another of the Akashic's noir anthology series of short mystery fiction. This one features (mostly) writers with financial backgrounds in 17 stories.

I was surprised to find this title but pleased with the creativity that is out there to focus on this American institution ripe with possible pitfalls. As written in Publishers Weekly these fictional stories find actions of "greed, volatility and desperation often lead to crime." Well, maybe this might let you focus on the troubles of others for a bit.

Wall Street is edited by the Shamus Award-winning author Peter Spiegelman.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Yestersday's News Become New Fiction Books (Hurricane Katrina)

With the recent Hurricane Gustav headlines, the three-year old Hurricane Katrina is back in the American consciousness. Since that time, of course, books about the tragedy have swept up in bookstores and libraries with its share of fiction books. Our library system has at least three adult titles in the mystery genre.

First is James Lee Burke's Tin Roof Blowdown from the long-running series with Iberia Parish Sheriff's Detective Dave Robicheaux. He travels to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina to help restore civil order which includes dealing with violent and desperate lawbreakers roaming the streets.

I have a copy of this book at home (a Christmas gift).

Second, I noticed in our new book section months ago, First the Dead by Tim Downs. This book marks the third of the series with forensic entomologist Nick "Bug Man"Polchak, so nicknamed because he is an expert in using bugs to deduce the time and circumstances of death. A member of DMORT, the disaster mortuary operational response team, used by FEMA to assist with mass casualties, Polchak goes to New Orleans when Katrina hits. Some corpses, however, show signs of death before the storm and Polchak's investigation takes a much different turn. First the Dead is also under the Christian fiction genre.

Last is New Orleans Noir, a collection of 18 unpublished short stories edited by Julie Smith. This is the twelfth book of the recent city noir short story series with two sections for the pre-and post-Katrina entries. Well-known writers such as Laura Lippman contribute to this project along with those on the rise.

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

A Buried Treasure in an old Newspaper--

I found a buried treasure in an old copy of the local freebie weekly newspaper Creative Loafing a few days ago. This issue was a great candidate for the recycle bin (I'd keep issue after issue if I'm not careful) but I found a worthwhile book column about a short story collection of the past year's best work. The Best American Mystery Stories 2007 is available now and according to the column it's a great collected work. Edited by Carl Hiaasen this edition (it is the 11th of the series to date), it offers 20 detective and crime stories (of which, the crime stories may even just be the threat of a crime). Included are the well-known and popular authors (i.e., Lawrence Block and James Lee Burke) along with the less well-known writers.

The column concludes with the observation for this volume that "there isn't a single clunker in the bunch, an impressive achievement for any literary juror." And as a reader, I'll gladly take those reading odds.