I have just begun this collection and the first story "Last Night" was a touching tale of the death of a beloved dog, but the second one "Werner" was a real knockout. It's the true story of Werner Hoeflich, an artist and caterer, who survived a fire and shared his story with Beard. Although he supplied most of the details, she turns it into art, vividly capturing his ordeal and amazing escape. Most of the stories in this collection are essay-like or actual essays. I enjoyed Beard's first two collections THE BOYS OF MY YOUTH and IN ZANESVILLE and I expect to enjoy these too.
Wednesday, November 02, 2022
Short Story Wednesday: "Werner" from Jo Ann Beard's FESTIVAL DAYS
Monday, October 31, 2022
Monday, Monday
Went to the library book sale here but could only carry home a few books. Not much interesting anyway, but I got two Nameless novels (STRANGERS, VIXENS) and a collection of short stories by Jo Ann Beard. My fourth book was one I'd already read--and not that long ago so I will look to pass that one along.
Saw AMSTERDAM, but it was pretty awful. So many talented actors wasted. What happened to David O Russell?
Finished SHETLAND, and sad to see the end of Douglas Henshall, who played the heck out of Jmmy Perez. Finished THE PATIENT, which didn't end well for me. Looking forward to THE WHITE LOTUS tonight.
What are you up to?
Friday, October 28, 2022
FFB-ROSEANNA by Maj Sjowall and Per Wahloo
From the blog of Elgin Bleecker
Roseanna by Per Wahloo and Maj Sjowall
Reading Roseanna confirms that Per Wahloo and Maj Sjowall were a hell of a great crime writing team.
Their publishers must have thought so, too. The pair went on to write nine more police procedurals featuring their fictional detective Martin Beck of the Swedish national police.
The story opens when workers repairing a set of locks connecting two lakes in Sweden’s inland waterway dredge up the naked body of a young woman.
Local police find no one in their small city who can identify the murdered woman. The investigation widens and Martin Beck is brought into the case.
Beck and his team figure the woman was a passenger on a cruise ship passing through the locks. The woman must have been killed on the boat and then dumped overboard.
The detectives determine which boat she was aboard and set about finding the the crew and other passengers. It is a long, painstaking process. Wahloo and Sjowall take their time yet make the police work fascinating.
Detective Martin Beck is an odd sort of hero. He is good at his job, but rather morose, always seems to have a cold, complains about the weather, and has no rapport with his wife and kids. He only connects with the guys he works with and even then he is a bit chilly.
Wahloo and Sjowall keep the story and its many clues and suspects clear and orderly. The authors had a clean, no nonsense writing style and the Lois Roth translation is well done.
Per Wahloo (1926-1975) and Maj Sjowall (1935-2020) were not only writing partners but also partners in life.
http://elginbleecker.blogspot.com/2022/10/roseanna-by-per-wahloo-and-maj-sjowall.html
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
Short Story Wednesday: "Hollywood Lanes" Megan Abbott in QUEENS NOIR
"Hollywood Lanes" was a story in QUEENS NOIR, which was published in 2008. Another story in the collection, "Buckner's Error" won the Edgar that year for Best Short Story. This may have been Megan's first short story.
This story perfectly captures both Megan's writing and Megan of 2008. I wish I could print it all here. It is so packed with description, it overflows the page. The detail makes that bowling alley seem more real than any I have ever been in. It is also packed with the longing of a young girl. I can't remember Megan ever bowling (it was out of favor in her youth), but she must have been in this one when she first moved to Forest Hills.
Hollywood Lanes existed in Forest Hills from 1952 until 2002. In this story, a twelve year old girl is working alongside of her mother at the bowling alley although she is mostly, along with everyone else working there, following the romance that goes on behind the pins each day. She is at the age when what she sees gives her feelings she can't quite define. What makes it doubly exciting is that the man's wife is working there too and everyone is waiting for her to discover the affair.
Our protagonist is so busy following what goes on behind the pins that she doesn't notice what's going on outside the lanes. I'm not going to tell. I hope someday Megan will put together a collection. She doesn't write shorts anymore though so it's unlikely.
Monday, October 24, 2022
Remembering Ed Gorman
(Thanks to Todd Mason for "borrowing" this piece, which appears in the program for Noircon 2022)
“Ed Gorman Remembered” by Patricia Abbott
You can easily find out about Ed Gorman’s amazing career on multiple sites. This is a more personal remembrance. During the decade I knew Ed Gorman, it always seemed possible that one day, I’d run into him at a conference or a bookstore but that never happened. Ed was not one to frequent such places according to those who knew him. But he was more than available on his blog until shortly before his death.
Five years after his death New Improved Gorman, the site where Ed and some of the crime-writing/reading world interacted on a daily basis, is still available to peruse. You can learn much about him there. You can also learn much about crime fiction.
Ed Gorman’s final posts are indicative of what he did so regularly on New Improved Gorman: promote his friends and in many cases, introduce newcomers to his world. His last two posts in the summer of 2016 interviewed Max Allan Collins and reviewed a book by Bill Pronzini. Ed died a few months later of a disease he had been battling for years.
It amazes me now that busy, successful writers like Ed Gorman and Bill Crider managed to post every day or even more often on their blogs. Ed’s posts were a good introduction to the crime fiction genre. In 2006, there was a vibrant blog world. A site called CrimeSpot (the creation of Graham Powell) collected blogs dealing with crime fiction and updated itself almost hourly as new posts appeared. Long before Facebook, people publishing crime stories or interested in them were able to interact through this truly wonderful resource.
One of the first interactions I had with Ed was when I commented on my blog that the only Western I had ever read was Lonesome Dove. He promptly sent me two of his Westerns, which changed my idea of what Westerns could be and I still read them today.
In 2008 I began a feature on my blog called Friday’s Forgotten Books. At first I solicited book reviews (Bill Crider was the first person I asked) but eventually crime fiction bloggers began to post them unsolicited and send me the links or send the review directly to me. For a few years, Ed posted a review of an old book nearly every week. But eventually he asked me if I would be willing to post his review on my blog. So, a day or two ahead of time, he sent it to me. I was never sure why he wanted them on my blog, but I was glad to have them. His reviews were always interesting, insightful, and very much “Ed.”
Ed was kind to me in other ways. He asked me for stories to publish in two of the anthologies he published with Martin Greenberg (Prisoner of Memory, 2008; Between Dark and the Daylight, 2009). This was heady stuff for a newer writer. Ed immediately treated people as if they belonged to the clan.
I am so grateful for the years Ed was a part of my life. In the pre-Internet world I would never have met him. Even if “meeting” has a different meaning now.Monday. Monday
Although I acknowledge TAR is not for everyone (very long and an unlikable character) it was the best movie I've seen in a very long time. Such a complex look at genius and what we sometimes tolerate from those who seem to have it. Blanchett is amazing-in every scene over a 2 hour and 40 minute movie. And the direction and screenplay is brilliant. So too the supporting cast.
Also enjoyed SHERWOOD, (Britbox) which almost left me in tears. And that it's based on a true story makes it that more poignant.
Not enjoying this season of SHETLAND. After a bit, the seasons tend to run together. I really did prefer the earlier seasons where they didn't drag on for so many episodes. There doesn't seem to be enough plot to justify 8 hours of it.
PBS' MAGPIE MURDERS was a great first episode.
Trying to read a novel, but I keep putting them aside. I think years ago, when there wasn't so much similar fare on TV, it was better reading. I'm trying to read FORSAKEN COUNTRY by Allen Eskens. I also have the Mary Rogers, memoir, SHY, but that looks awfully heavy to hold at night. Also THE IT GIRL, by Ruth Ware.
Lovely weather the last two days. I think we have a couple more good days before the shoe drops.
Oh, my one-year followup mammogram was okay. Now I can breathe for a while.
Friday, October 21, 2022
FFB
(Ed Gorman- from the archives)
Wednesday, October 19, 2022
Short Story Wednesday: "Tiny, Meaningless Things" Marissa Silver, THE NEW YORKER
Evelyn is a 74 year old woman. She is the mother of three adult daughters and was married twice. She spends her days largely doing house-wifely tasks that her daughters find mysterious. How can she clean her apartment and iron her days away? One day, the seven-year old boy (Scotty)from across the hall knocks. And then begins his regular visits, where he assists Evelyn with the kind of tasks he can do. She feeds him cinnamon toast and one day gives him a dollar, telling him he must value his work. Both of them are content in their roles.
But after a bit, he begins taking things: a package of kleenex, a corn cob holder. At some point, Evelyn decides even though the thefts are small, she must act on it and she marches across the hall and tells his mother. Scotty brings out the box of things he has stolen and his mother, though mystified by it all, makes him apologize. While Evelyn is visiting a daughter, the family moves. Is it related to this incident? I think it is odd enough to make a family with a small child move.
Marissa Silver is writing a collection of stories about Evelyn and another older woman. She is a regular contributor to THE NEW YORKER. I like this sort of story but it's probably not for everyone.
Monday, October 17, 2022
Monday, Monday
A friend and I went to the DIA exhibit of Van Gogh in America where 70 of his canvasses, many from private collections, were on display. This may be the only showing in NA. I have seen some of these before, of course, but many I saw for the first time. If you are nearby between now and January, it is well worth your time. So easy to get the audio now right on your phone.
Getting colder here. At least the city of Birmingham appear to be reaching the end of the street work. Or nearly.
Reading LESSONS by Ian McEwan. He sure can write.
Watching SHERWOOD, THE HANDMAID'S TALE, ATLANTA, DERRY GIRLS (funniest season), and a Norwegian doc about a kidnapping on Netflix. This I must say, is there any detective on any series who doesn't have a parent with Alzheimer's, an estranged spouse, a difficult child?
Listening to podcasts while I walk and clean: (Washington)POST REPORTS, NEW YORKER RADIO HOUR, POD SAVE AMERICA, FILMSPOTTING, WTF (Marc Maron, DETROIT DAILY, DETROIT TODAY, NYT BOOK REVIEW PODCAST and many more. It seems like I must have words going into my head.
How about you?
Sunday, October 16, 2022
Friday, October 14, 2022
FFB: IN AT THE DEATH, Francis Duncan
In At the Death by Francis Duncan, (c) 1952, Penguin Random House – 2016 Vintage trade paper, mystery, #6 in Mordecai Tremaine series
“When murder is afoot, nothing is as it seems. Mordecai Tremaine and Chief Inspector Jonathan Boyce rarely allow a promising game of chess to be interrupted — though when murder is the disrupting force, they are persuaded to make an exception. After a quick stop at Scotland Yard, the pair are spirited away to Bridgton.
No sooner have they arrived than it becomes clear that the city harbors more than its fair share of passions and motives…and one question echoes loudly throughout the cobbled streets: why did Dr. Hardene, the local GP of impeccable reputation, bring a revolver with him on a routine visit to a patient?
Perfect for fans of Agatha Christie and Margery Allingham’s classic mysteries, Mordecai Tremaine’s latest excursion into crime detection convinces him that, when it comes to murder, nothing can be assumed…”
My Take:
While last year I read the fourth book in the series, Murder for Christmas,
and enjoyed it enough to buy a second novel, this one. After reading
this, I’ve ordered the other three Duncan novels in these five Vintage
Crime editions, and look forward to reading them.
I like the somewhat unusual Tremaine character, Duncan does a nice job with setting, and the plot had enough elements to keep me guessing until near the end. These are easy going mysteries, no graphic violence, no thriller elements, just the thing to read while relaxing in a comfy chair on a Summer afternoon.
The Mordecai Tremaine novels by Francis Duncan, in order. Five are available in Vintage Crime editions.
1. They’ll Never Find Out (1944)
2. Murder Has a Motive (1947)
3. Murderer’s Bluff (1948)
4. Murder for Christmas (1949)
5. So Pretty a Problem (1950)
6. In at the Death (1952)
7. Behold a Fair Woman (1954)
Duncan also writes a series featuring Peter Justice, about which, sadly, I have no information.
Wednesday, October 12, 2022
Short Story Wednesday: THE ANGEL OF ROME and other STORIES, Jess Walter
I have read four of these stories, all very well written, although one ended too abruptly for my taste. But the winner for me was "Town and Country." I groaned when I saw it was about Alzheimer's, but it was such a great take on it. And the voice of both the father and son are so strong. I hope Town and Country Motel exists somewhere because I know a few folks who would fit in there perfectly. "Mr. Voice" was also a delight--the good stepfather isn't often found in literature.
I very much liked the novel BEAUTIFUL RUINS by Walter from a few years back too.
Monday, October 10, 2022
Monday Monday
Enjoyed DAVID MILCH, A LIFE-it really depended on the reader knowing his work though. I did because NYPD BLUE and DEADWOOD were two of my favorite shows. Milch is a complicated guy-full of addictions, which made it an interesting if somewhat sad story. Milch has dementia now so I am glad he got this out in time.
Another writer took up some time this week. Marc Maron had Tony Gilroy on his WTF podcast. It was a terrific interview. So generous with what he shared about his career and writing screenplays. Michael Clayton is such a great movie.Then I had to rewatch it on Prime for $3.00 and then I got out the screenplay, which I bought years ago. So much of his story comes through in ways other than with dialog. Made me want to get Disney to watch Andor.
One movie at the theater: THE GOOD HOUSE.A pretty mediocre movie but Kline and especially Weaver were fine. It really needed some new beats on alcoholism, which it didn't manage.
TV: Still watching Vera. Not very impressed with the Van der Valk series on PBS. When you update a series from the seventies to now, something gets lost. I do however love seeing Amsterdam again. Hard to believe it is 25 years since we lived there because it looks the same even if the stories are different. Finishing up The Patient, Bad Sisters, Atlanta and struggling through Industry. You know you are getting old when watching twenty-somethings have sex like bunnies gets tiresome.
The leaves are changing quickly now although not as dramatically as some years because we didn't have much rain. Quite cold some days too.
How about you?
Friday, October 07, 2022
FFB: BLACK IS THE COLOR, John Brunner
From the archives: Randy Johnson (2015)
As a young boy discovering a love of reading even as I was learning, John
Brunner was an early find, third I believe, behind Heinlein and Norton.
The early stuff was mostly from the Ace Doubles. Black Is The Color is a
little bit different. From 1969, part spy novel, it has a plot line
that would fit in in things happening today.
Mark Hanwell, a disillusioned young man returns home to London after six months in Spain where he’d met and worked for The Big Famous Writer he only ever refers to as Hairy Harry. It didn’t take long for him to realize his hero had feet of clay, making the bulk of his money selling pornography and weed. In fact, the last four pieces of writing under his name had been written by Mark.
Home, he goes looking for a woman who’d sent him a few letters early on, then stopped. A singer, he traced the bank d she’d been with falling into as different a world as he’d ever run into.
Sadism was part of it, voodoo, a plan to start a race war in England, Mark finds his work an and the man she’d taken up with, a South Africaner.
I’d never heard of this book before I came across it. Good stuff.
Sometimes I wonder what people who died pre-2016 would make of the world we know now.
Wednesday, October 05, 2022
Short Story Wednesday: VALENTINES by Olaf Olafsson
Because I enjoy Olafsson's novel a few weeks ago, I picked up this collection of short stories. There is one for each month of the year and they all concern romance. In the first four (what I have read so far) it is romance or marriage gone wrong. Each of them has an upsetting ending that is not exactly a twist, but it's unpleasant. (And sometimes not really earned).
And after reading one, I read the other three anticipating a bad end and it colored my reading. There is no indication these stories were published anywhere else so I am wondering if he wrote them strictly for a collection and with the rough landings in mind. Can a story be written too much for the ending? Usually that is not the case with mainstream writing but it often is for genre writing. I think it works better for one than the other. I guess I will try a few more of these but I am not impressed.
Monday, October 03, 2022
Monday. Monday
A great relief that my brother and his extended family all survived Ian although I read in the NYT today that his county really blew their evacuation and cost lives. Glad theirs were not affected by such incompetence. However, electricity and Internet is still elusive.
No movies.
TV: watching Vera on Hoopla, trying Industry on HBO Max, which my son and daughter like but I'm having trouble getting into it, Atlanta on FX, Bad Sisters on Apple and The Patient. Reservation Dogs just finished wonderfully. Also a really quirky Canadian show on Netflix Michael: Tu and Th, about a therapist and his patient. A bit like Schitts's Creek as to its sense of humor.
Reading THINGS WE LOST TO THE WATER, Eric Nguyen, short stories by Olaf Olafssen and a novel by Elena Ferrante (THE DAYS OF ABANDONMENT). Also just started the David Milch memoir.
Lots of time with friends this week. Again, I am so thankful for them. I know I want to run around more than most people seem to need to. Did I always?
Friday, September 30, 2022
FFB: THE HUSBAND'S SECRET, Liane Moriarty
At heart this is a domestic novel set in Australia. But Liane Moriarty
was clever enough to put enough twists and turns to keep a reader who
likes suspense engaged. It entwines several women and their respective
families, all connected to the same school, and gives them stories rich
and complex enough to allow them interact on several levels.
Of course, the very title seduces you.
One character, mother of three girls, and a woman who prides herself on
being on top of things, finds a letter addressed to her from her husband
with the warning it is not to be read until after his death. What she
does with this letter forms the first part of the novel. But we also
having a grieving mother about to lose her beloved grandchild in a move
to the US, and a marriage threatened from an odd angle.
The stories are all interesting enough to keep you turning pages in the
second half of the book. And the first surprise is not the only one.
The strength of the book lay in its "what-ifs." The repercussions of
human behavior, often the actions that occur without thought or notice,
is at its heart.
Liane Moriarty has written several even more popular books including BIG LITTLE LIES, NINE PERFECT STRANGERS and APPLES NEVER FALL.
FFB: A NIGHT IN THE LONESOME OCTOBER, Roger Zelazny
- Roger Zelazny (from the archives: Bill Crider)
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
Short Story Wednesday: "The Sensible Thing," F. Scott Fitzgerald
https://shortstoryproject.com/stories/the-sensible-thing/
This Fitzgerald story certainly reminds me of this passage.
Here is the final passage in "The Sensible Thing"
“Yes,” he whispered into her lips. “There’s all the time in the world…”
All the time in the world–his life and hers. But for an instant as he kissed her he knew that though he search through eternity he could never recapture those lost April hours. He might press her close now till the muscles knotted on his arms–she was something desirable and rare that he had fought for and made his own–but never again an intangible whisper in the dusk, or on the breeze of night…
Well, let it pass, he thought; April is over, April is over. There are all kinds of love in the world, but never the same love twice.
George O'Kelley is in love with Jonquil, a girl from Tennessee (and much like Zelda Sayre from Alabama in FSF's own life). George is an engineer, temporarily working in insurance. Things do not quite work out for them on the first try; George is rather a failure and competing men are lining the porch at Jonquil's house. But he goes off, goes to South America, and wildly succeeds, returning ten months later. They go for a walk in a magnificent garden and it ends with a kiss and the word abpve
(Scott later noted: “Story about Zelda + me. All true.”)
Monday, September 26, 2022
Monday, Monday
If I had to choose my favorite author, it would be Elizabeth Strout. I have loved following Olive Kitteridge and Lucy Barton and the Burgess Boys for the last twenty years. However, LUCY BY THE SEA may be more than I can handle since it takes Lucy from the first days of the pandemic up until the book's publication. It painfully brings back our isolation, our impotence, our mistakes in handling a pandemic and how other issues erupted to make it even more critical. And yet I can't stop reading it even though I know it is not really a good idea to relive it. Her voice is so powerful.
Also reading THINGS WE LOST IN THE WATER, Eric Nguyen for my book group. Speaking of which, Naomi Hirahara zoomed with us last week talking about CLARK AND DIVISION and was a wonderful guest speaker. Can't wait to read EVERGREEN, which comes out next summer.
No movies to report. If GOD'S COUNTRY comes your way, it's worth seeing.
Enjoying REBOOT, BAD SISTERS, THE HANDMAID'S TALE and trying to catch up with various VERAS I have missed over the years on TV. I need a good British mystery now and then, and especially enjoy Ann Cleeves style of mystery. I see SHETLAND is back. I might have to join whichever Brit streamer it's om.
Saturday night, I went with friends to TRINITY HOUSE, a tiny live music venue in Livonia, MI where many local musicians played songs they had written during Covid. So nice to hear live music.
What's up with you?
Wednesday, September 21, 2022
Short Story Wednesday, "The Tooth" Shirley Jackson
Clara is suffering from a tooth ache, which as her unnamed husband reminds her, has been bothering her since their honeymoon. Full of codeine and aspirin and despite her claim she feels funny and light-headed, he puts her on a bus for a very long trip into Manhattan. Her husband has insisted on this, claiming the local dentist is a butcher. It is very hard to understand why he doesn't accompany her in the state she is in. She has even taken a sleeping pill?
The bus stops at roadside cafes many times and a man named Jim begins to accompany Clara, talking of some magical place. He gets her into the city where her dentists sends her to a surgeon. During most of the story Clara seems only semi-conscious of where she is and what is happening. Of course, gas administered by the surgeon further removes Clara from reality. When it is all finished, Jim is waiting for her and they run barefoot into the hot sand.
Having been through many dental procedures like Clara's it is pretty familiar. And clearly Shirley Jackson has too. Much of the time, I was in awe Clara could navigate from place to place as drug-addled as she was. This story was seen as very Freudian at the time it was published with all those teeth references. Was Jim real? I doubt it. But clearly such a rescue was something Clara wished for. (And maybe Shirley too). If you have seen the Elizabeth Moss movie on Shirley Jackson, Clara is all the more familiar.
Monday, September 19, 2022
Monday Monday
The Handmaid's Tale is back and as scary as ever. Hard to imagine how Elizabeth Moss directed and acted in this episode. She is half-crazy for most of it. Still I have to see it out at this point. Finished Dopesick, which was great if disheartening.
Saw See How They Run, which was pretty bad. Eight of us went and our opinions ranged from okay for a Saturday morning to never okay. What a waste of a good cast.
Spent one day exploring Wyandotte, MI, which is along the Detroit River and quite a hip town. A friend of Phil and mine from our Lambertville, NJ days in the late sixties had an art gallery there. He is now dead but we met his widow Patt Slack who now runs it.
Still plowing along on the same book as last week. But I did finish Clark and Division, which Naomi Hirahara will discuss with my book group on Tuesday night. What a nice job she did with exploring the Japanese-Americans sent to Chicago from Manzinaar but also creating characters to care about.
What about you?
Friday, September 16, 2022
FFB: TIME WILL DARKEN IT, WIlliam Maxwell
William
Maxwell was one of my favorite writers. He died about twenty years ago
leaving a handful of novels and many shorts stories and essays. My
favorite of his novels is TIME WILL DARKEN IT.
When
the King family is paid a visit from distant Southern relatives, Austin
King, eager to impress a female cousin and repay their kindness to his
father, behaves in such a way as to threaten his marriage, his law
practice, and his reputation as a young attorney. His pregnant wife is especially torn asunder by his actions.
Maxwell
makes every character in this seemingly ordinary story come to life. I
can't think of many books I closed so reluctantly and yet with such
complete satisfaction. His novels include:
- Bright Center of Heaven (1934)
- They Came Like Swallows (1937)
- An autobiographical novella about the cruel impact of the 1918 flu epidemic, as seen through the eyes of an 8-year-old midwestern child and his family
- The Folded Leaf (1945)
- Time Will Darken It (1948)
- The Chateau (1961)
- So Long, See You Tomorrow (1980) (Winner of the William Dean Howells Medal and National Book Award for Fiction)
- An aging man remembers a boyhood friendship he had in 1920s Illinois which falters following a murder.
Thursday, September 15, 2022
Wednesday, September 14, 2022
Short Story Wednesday: "Certain European Movies" Emma Cline (THE NEW YORKER)
Like the Hemingway story of a few months ago, this is about a couple, probably in Spain or at least in a Spanish speaking country. This couple doesn't know each other well and it isn't clear if they met on this trip or arranged it. (They are probably academics) She is older than him and the story is from her perspective. The plot is mostly about their trips to various beaches, their difficulty in finding places in a foreign country. How the Europeans staying at this residence find them humorous.
One beach had become theirs, even though there really is no theirs.
This couple seems ill-suited to each other. There is an age difference. They take pictures, which she knows they will delete before returning home. He has a family in the States
Now if I wasn't looking for a story to talk about today, would I have finished this? Probably yes because unlike the first story I tried (Kelly Link) this one read easily enough. But even on my third read of a fairly short story, I was still picking up hints on its themes. I think I will read it again too.
Interesting how the author (also of THE GIRLS, based on the Manson girls) doles out information stingily, making you hungry for it. Probably few would have had to read it 4 times to get it all. I think I am a day-dreamy reader, always thinking what I might say were I writing it.
Monday, September 12, 2022
Monday, Monday
Reading THE SACRAMENT by Olaf Olaffson. I heard him speak on one of the book podcasts I listen to and was impressed. He's written several books, but this one is about a nun drawn back into an old crime. The writing is beautiful, which means so much to me when I read. If the writing is gorgeous, the plot can just be okay. But on TV it is only dialog that gets to shine. Very different when you think about it.
I went to Ann Arbor with a friend and was shocked at how many towering buildings have gone up in the last decade. Their medical center(s) are so dominant now. That must mean the future is in medicine. Visited the beautiful Matthai Gardens. The streets downtown have been pedestrianized and bike lanes are everywhere.
Got my omicron booster today. Quite a long wait, which I never had with the last two boosters.
Watching DOPESICK and THE PATIENT. Finished SLOW HORSES but in the end I was not that impressed. It has a great premise as to a division for failures in MI5, but the crime this one featured seemed dull. And all the scenes were of men driving around in the dark and engaging in man talk. It never lived up to the first brilliant scenes. Ah well, maybe his plots get more interesting. It used to be British series were about the upper crust. Now they all seem to be about gangs, immigrants, and drugs. (So too so many novels from all countries).
No movies of interest.
Off to my writing group in the hope it will spur me to write more.
What about you?
Friday, September 09, 2022
THE CASE OF THE LUCKY LEGS, Erle Stanley Gardiner
(review by Sarah J Wesson)
THE CASE OF THE LUCKY LEGS, Erle Stanley Gardiner
While
Earle Stanley Gardiner can hardly be called a forgotten author, nor
Perry Mason a forgotten character, the books that first introduced these
icons to the public appear to be fading from memory. Or
at least they are in my library, where most of them have been relegated
to the large print shelves so that the patrons who grew up reading
about the singular cases of the granite-hard defense attorney can enjoy
them without squinting.
The earliest Gardiner in our collection is The Case of the Lucky Legs. First published in 1933, it was the fifth of what would be roughly eighty-two Perry Mason adventures. Stilted by our standards, with rigid standards of grammar and punctuation, and---heaven forbid---not a few adverbs, this mystery still grabs the imagination and keeps it there until the last page.
The case starts with a provocative photograph of a pair of shapely female legs, sent to the lawyer by a prominent businessman, who wants Mason to do something about a fraud that has hurt a young lady of his acquaintance. It seems that a movie studio man has been conning innocent girls into competing in a Lucky Legs contest, the winner of which is promised a screen career that never materializes. Unfortunately, there is no legal recourse unless the con man confesses.
Unlike the televised, post World War II Perry Mason who has entered our cultural lexicon, the Perry Mason of the 1930s wasn't afraid to get his hands or his ethics dirty---he basically agrees beat a confession out of the huckster, though he does pause to square this plan with the county prosecutor before heading to the man’s hotel. In the lobby, he bumps into a frightened young lady with good-looking gams, so it comes as no surprise---to the reader or our hero---that Mason discovers the murdered body of the con man. Moments before the police arrive, alerted by a neighbor who heard a woman’s screams, Mason extracts himself by a bit of slick trickery and gets to work.
It seems odd that Perry Mason doesn’t set foot in a courtroom in Lucky Legs---he didn't settle into regular trial work until later in the series. It’s clear that Gardiner is till getting to know his character and hadn’t quite settled on his formula. But Mason does tamper with a crime scene, trap himself in a legal corner or two, smoke enough to stun a camel, and bring the murderer to justice at the fifty-ninth minute of the eleventh hour despite numerous red herrings. Furthermore, his client is as lovely and clueless as they come and the man footing the bill is an interfering, opinionated pain in the tuchus. Della Street is smart, sassy, and loyal, while Paul Drake is hangdog, hungry, and resourceful.
These are among the golden elements that have kept Perry Mason going for almost eighty years. They’re well worth a revival, not only as the prototypes to modern legal procedurals or slices of social history, but as terrific who-on-earth-dunnits.
I confess that I check out these books fairly often to keep them off the weeding reports. If that's a crime, I doubt even Hamilton Berger, Mr. Mason's D.A. foil and frenemy, could bring himself to prosecute.
Wednesday, September 07, 2022
First Wednesday Book Review: TASTE: MY LIFE IN FOOD, Stanley Tucci
In the days before I cut the cord, I enjoyed Stanley Tucci's trek through Italy on CNN. I have also enjoyed him in movies like BIG NIGHT and JULIA AND JULIE. Listening to him read this on audio was a treat. He begins with his childhood and the sort of dishes he grew up eating in his Italian-American family who lived in Katonah, NY. He included the lunches he took to school, what he ate after school, what the other kids were eating. All the sort of information a reader finds interesting but by not think to ask.
His mother was a terrific cook despite working full-time and food was an important part of their life. This book is full of recipes, advice on buying and cooking food, and the kind of thing it is interesting to hear about--like what they feed actors on sites filming movies and TV shows. He shares great meals he has had all over the world and the people he has had them with. This is a terrific book if food interests you at all.
For more book reviews, please visit Barrie Summy's blog right here.
Short Story Wednesday: Two Stories from MISSISSIPPI NOIR
"Uphill," Mary Miller and "Cheap Suitcase and a New Town," Chris Offutt
These are two beautifully written stories. I enjoyed them both but reading them in succession is probably a mistake. Especially with noir stories whose characters and settings tend to be much alike. Both stories had a female protagonist who was a match for anyone who went up against her.
I have read other work by the authors. BILOXI by Mary Miller and MY FATHER, THE PORNOGRAPHER by Chris Offutt.
The NOIR books is such an extensive series now. Clearly a lot of people have a yearning for these dark stories. I have dipped into these books over the years but have never read an entire volume. How about you guys?Are you fans of this series or noir in general?
Monday, September 05, 2022
Monday, Monday
Saw HALLELUJAH, the movie about Leonard Cohen at the theater. There were four of us, yet the ticket seller warned us to sit in our assigned seats. The theater held perhaps 200 seats.
At home, Criterion is running the "kitchen sink" British films of the 50s-60s. I have seen them all before but it's fun to see them again. So far I have watched THE GIRL WITH THE GREEN EYES and THE L-SHAPED ROOM. Both are overly long but have lots of good things in them. Seeing Rita Tushingham, 22 at the time, with Peter Finch, 48 is more alarming now than then I think. We were used to seeing Audrey Hepburn with every aging actor of the time around then.
Finally getting to SLOW HORSES, which is very good. Also moderately like BAD SISTERS.
A rainy day here. Not many of them this summer.
Reading CLARK AND DIVISION still. I have to spread it out so I won't forget it for the book group. Naomi is going to visit us via zoom. I didn't have much luck with FEN after making my library round it up for me. Reading one strange story is perhaps enough for me.
What's up with you?
Friday, September 02, 2022
FFB: THE JEWEL THAT WAS OURS, Colin Dexter
from the archives: Rick Robinson
The Jewel That Was Ours by Colin Dexter, Ballantine (Ivy), 1991, paperback, mystery, police procedural – Inspector Morse
This
is Inspector Morse’s ninth outing, if I have the count right, and
though I’ve tried to read these in order it’s been a while and I think I
pulled this off the shelf out of order. Still, little seems to have
changed, perhaps Lewis is slightly more confident, and Morse is an
angrier, sadder, boozier man than I remembered from the last one I read.
I liked John Thaw as Morse on the Mystery! and now I can’t read these books without picturing him in the role. No problem there.
This story concerns a group of tourists, all from California, on a tour of Oxford and other historical cities. One of the group is going to present an Oxford museum with The Wolverton Tongue, part of a buckle artifact originally set with three rubies (only one left now). The woman has a heart attack, the “jewel” is stolen, then a lecturer is murdered. Morse is attracted to a woman who drinks too much and is one of the lecturers to the group. With two deaths and a theft, the tour halts while Morse and Lewis investigate the many clues.
Dexter is a pleasure to read, though the last chapter seems overly drawn out in this book. Still, the motives are sound, the red herrings sufficiently convincing, the language satisfying, the clues well if scantily placed, and it’s another good Morse outing. These books are satisfying enough that I never seem to want to read two in a row, but each time I pick one up I’m glad I did. I think I still have a couple unread, so there is more to enjoy ahead. I was lucky enough to meet him at a signing some years ago in southern California, he was a very personable fellow.
If your only experience with Morse is with the televised series, I encourage you to try the books, these are very good.