Sunday, July 28, 2013
Black Pulp Gets PULPED! Featuring Walter Mosley!
Thursday, July 11, 2013
Derrick Ferguson Takes The Train To GRAND CENTRAL NOIR
Compiled by Terrence P. McCauley
File Size: 349 KB
Print Length: 155 pages
Publisher: Metropolitan Crime Publishing (June 14,
2013)
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
Language: English
ASIN: B00DFA32KM
Okay, just bear with me for a few minutes, I cry
your pardon. Those of you who have been good enough and indulgent enough to
read my previous reviews both book and movie know that at times I can be
somewhat long winded. But I assure you I do so for a reason and not because I’m
in love with my own prose. And I’m trying to make a point here about GRAND
CENTRAL NOIR that I think will illustrate exactly what I’m trying to get at
when describing the feel of this anthology.
Most of you are familiar with Will Eisner and “The
Spirit,” correct? Remember how every once in a while Mr. Eisner would tell
stories that had nothing to do with The Spirit or maybe he would show up in the
last panel or two simply because since the strip was titled after him he had to
show up somewhere. In those standalone, Day In The Life stories, Mr. Eisner
would tell short stories full of suspense, mystery, pathos, comedy, horror,
crime or romance. Some of those stories were really very memorable. Well, at
its best GRAND CENTRAL NOIR evokes the feel of some of those Will Eisner
stories. And even when it’s not at its best, it reminded me of the “Naked City”
TV show. Which also ain’t bad.
The concept behind GRAND CENTRAL NOIR is simple: all
of the stories are set in New York’s Grand Central Terminal, the largest train
station in the world celebrating its 100th birthday this year. I’ve
been in Grand Central Terminal many times and it is truly one of the most
magnificent structures in New York City. Thousands of people use The Terminal
every day and just like they used to say on “Naked City,” they all have
stories.
The stories in GRAND CENTRAL NOIR are crime stories
but that doesn’t mean there’s no room for other elements to enter into these
stories so that while crime is the driving force behind them, they certainly
don’t all read the same. And that’s a testament to the talented writers that
Terrence McCauley has compiled for this volume.
It’s never stated when I.A. Watson’s “Lost Property”
takes place but it reads like a 1930’s screwball comedy/mystery and it’s an
excellent choice to start the anthology with as it’s breezy, light and thanks
to the rat-ta-tat-tat dialog a fun read with a conclusion that had me grinning
from ear to ear.
“Train to Nowhere” by Charles Salzberg and Jessica
Hall is set in modern day but it’s feel is very much that of classic noir.
There’s a mystery to be solved here but I got the impression that the writers
weren’t so much interested in the solution of the mystery as they were in evoking
a certain mood and tone and they did indeed accomplish that.
For a while there I feared that Ron Fortier was
telling me a shaggy dog story in “Fat Lip’s Revenge” but I should have known
better. In the hands of an old pro like Ron it’s a story that at first appears
to be going way out over there in the fields somewhere but once you get to the
end you understand why Ron had to go out there
to bring you back to here. Another
story that had me grinning like an idiot by the end.
“Fortune” by S.A. Solomon ends just when it seems
like it should be shifting into a higher gear. Not that it isn’t well written.
It does a good job of getting into the head of the narrator but that ending is
just too abrupt for me and left me feeling cheated out of a proper resolution
to the story.
“Meet Me at the Clock” by R. Narvaez is a story
that’s soaked in hopelessness right from the opening paragraphs. By the time
Lew Conrad got on the train I knew that this story was not going to end well
for him and I was right. And “Meet Me at the Clock” is one of several stories
in the anthology that gave me the distinctive impression that the actual
crime-related plot isn’t all that important to the writer. R. Narvaez is much
more interested in exploring this day in the life of this second rater who
deserves the fate he gets at the end of the story.
“Terminal Sweep Stakes” is what I like to call a
Take No Prisoners Story. Amy Mars is telling a hard mean story about a hard
mean man and she pulls no punches doing so. I have no idea if Grand Central
Terminal has its own police force but the idea itself was fascinating enough to
pull me into the story. The barbed wire and bourbon bite of the prose did the
rest.
“Without a Hitch” by R.J. Westerhoff did have a
couple of hitches for me. Including a time shift so abrupt and unclear that I
actually wondered if somehow a chunk of story had been left out by accident.
And the ending is way too anti-climactic and left me mumbling, “You mean that’s
it?”
After reading J. Walt Layne’s “The Drop” you may be
wondering where the crime element is as I did. I don’t think there is one and I
don’t think Mr. Layne cares one bit. Again, this another story that I feel is
much more interested in characterization and striving to craft a mood and
atmosphere. This story feels ambitious, as if Mr. Layne was trying out a
different type of storytelling from his usual style.
“A Primal Force” is a story about family and revenge
that I admit I paid more attention to because I recently watched on Turner
Classic Movies a really good biopic starring Ernest Borgnine about Joseph
Petrosino, a New York City detective at the turn of the century who was put in
charge of dealing with Italian criminal organizations such as The Black Hand.
Petrosino and The Black Hand both play major roles in this story.
“Off Track” by Matt Hilton had me laughing out loud
by the time I reached the end. Because it was a laugh that Mr. Hilton had truly
earned as I admired the way he had me thinking one way and so smoothly turned
the story completely around. The story’s like a great sleight of hand magic
trick where the magician has you looking at one hand while he’s actually doing
the trick with the other. One of my favorite stories in the book.
I really enjoyed W. Silas Donohue’s “Herschel’s
Broom” because even though all of the stories are set in Grand Central Terminal, “Herschel’s Broom” is the one that to me
was actually about Grand Central Terminal,
if you get my drift and I think after reading it, you most certainly will.
“Timetable For Crime” by Marcelle Thiebaux is
another story I really enjoyed as I like heist stories where whoever is pulling
off the heist gets away with it. Criminals are oftentimes so inept in real life
that it’s downright fun to see a smart criminal in fiction pull off the perfect
crime. A great story that barrels along full tilt boogie from start to finish
and never sets a foot wrong once.
“Mary Mulligan” is a story that’s safely in the
middle of the road. There’s nothing about it that really makes it stand out but
there’s nothing wrong with it either. The prose by Jen Conley is pleasant to
read and the situation plays itself out in a fairly straightforward manner with
no embellishment or surprises. I like Jen Conley’s prose and wish she’d really
swung for the fences in this one. Still, this story is good enough that after
reading it I made a notation to look up some of her other stories.
“Spice” by Seamus Scanlon is another story that like
“Fortune” and “Without A Hitch” ends just where it was getting goood and I was
looking forward to where it was going to take me.
Terrence P. McCauley serves up the piping hot action
of “Grand Central: Terminal” as if fully aware his responsibility as clean-up
is to leave readers wishing there were more stories to read and he does it with
a razor-sharp spy vs. spy story. It isn’t a long story but it does a very good
job of conveying a larger world outside the borders and I can very easily see
more stories about James Hicks and I would love to know more about The
University. If you were a fan of ‘24’ then you’ll get right into this story and
enjoy it as much as I did.
Before wrapping up this review I know that the
writers would want me to point out that when you purchase a copy of GRAND
CENTRAL NOIR you’ll be helping out a wonderful cause: God’s Love We Deliver is an organization dedicated to improving the
health and quality of life of men, women and children living with HIV/AIDS,
cancer and other serious illnesses. All proceeds from this book will be donated
to God’s Love We Deliver. For more
information about this organization and the amazing work that they are doing, please visit their website
So should you read GRAND CENTRAL NOIR? Sure you
should. Not only will you be helping out a worthwhile cause but you’ll be getting
eight stories out of fifteen that are absolutely first-rate. Call those the
Will Eisner level good stories. The others are “Naked City” good which as I
said earlier, still ain’t bad. Enjoy.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Fight Card: Brooklyn Beatdown
Brooklyn – 1954. Bare knuckler brawler Levi Kimbro battles his
way through the bloody backroom ghetto bars of Brooklyn in pursuit of his dream
of owning his own business. It's a hard and vicious road he walks and it
becomes even more complicated when he falls hard for the electrifying Dorothea
McBricker.
Dorothea's brother, Teddy, has fallen under the influence of
notorious gangster Duke Williamson – a powerful man who is pressuring Levi to
join his stable of fighters or face off against the human killing machine,
‘Deathblow’ Ballantine. A knock-down,
drag out, Brooklyn Beatdown is
brewing, and Levi will need every ounce of his fighter’s heart if he wants to
save not only himself, but the woman he loves ...
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