[originally published in the New York Journal of Books]
“Serious stories, taking in the main a hard line on
reality, and any gray scale would show them on the dark end of the spectrum.”
When mystery author
extraordinaire Lawrence Block gathers stories for an anthology, top names
mingle with newcomers among the authors he taps on the shoulder. His own
mysteries have dipped deeply into the classic New York City and Los Angeles
dark police procedurals, but also skated and danced with merriment at times.
Obviously, its the darkness that Block wants for At Home in the Dark—starting with a chatty Foreword that reviews
the history of “noir” and explains why he’s avoided that term in his title.
But you can’t avoid the
genre, since each story here features some aspect of the unsettling, creepy,
menacing, and lock-the-door disturbing. There are 17, and it’s worth grabbing
this collection just for the sake of reading another mystery by Joyce Carol Oates.
But Joe R. Lansdale, Nancy Pickard, Jim Fusilli, and Duane Swierczynski will
also draw fans. And part of the fun (if being alternately scared and despairing
is fun!) is the contrast among their styles, as well as the surprises in the
directions each one chooses.
Loosely speaking, James
Reasoner’s story is a Western (but dark!), Joe Hill’s is horror, and Joe R.
Lansdale jumps to an unexpected dystopian future.
But then there’s Elaine
Kagan’s story “Hot Pants,” which launches this collection. It opens in a
nursing home where everyone’s losing whatever marbles they entered with, yet
it’s where Lucinda Conte needs to keep her failing father housed and cared for.
Grim motivation for working in an Italian restaurant with good tips … and a
kitchen culture straight out of the #metoo nightmares. See whether you would
have predicted the final sentence, and the way the last action ties back to the
title.
What would you guess a story
called “The Eve of Infamy” would be about? Hint: Think FDR and his famous speech.
Here’s a taste of the story, by Jim Fusilli:
“No, he decided, knee-deep in
debris. He’d wait out the war and go back to the Bronx. The streets were in his
blood. He knew the rooftops and alleyways. Theft came naturally, violence did
too. If the next few years broke his way, he could bankroll a future, playing
steady amid the turmoil. Then he’d go back home a champion. He’d aim high. The
cops wouldn’t dare touch him.”
In other words, don’t look
for happy endings in this collection. A few “just desserts” maybe, but even
those are grim. Block’s roundup proves that The
Girl With the Dragon Tattoo wasn’t unusual, just longer than usual for this
genre. Brace for violence, sexual and otherwise. Don’t read this if you’re on
the brink of depression, as it might tip you in. But if you’re a survivor of
many a dark crime novel, there’s great pleasure in these concise, tight, and
twisted tales.
One of the most enjoyable
aspects of At Home in the Dark is
seeing the collection as insight into Lawrence Block’s preferences, amply
described in his “rant” at the opening. His description of the noir collections
in vogue is spot on: “They are serious stories, taking in the main a hard line
on reality, and any gray scale would show them on the dark end of the
spectrum.”
Here’s one more classic
snippet to treasure from the collection, from the story “The Cucuzza Curse” by
Thomas Pluck: “Joey was here because he knew people, and he knew people. … He had a reputation as a
reasonable if foppish good earner with an even temper, respected by men of
violence.”
Don’t say you didn’t know
what you were getting into: the dark!!
PS: Looking for more mystery reviews, from cozy to very dark? Browse the Kingdom Books mysteries review blog here.
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PS: Looking for more mystery reviews, from cozy to very dark? Browse the Kingdom Books mysteries review blog here.
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