Friday, May 30, 2025

FFB: ORDINARY GRACE, William Kent Krueger

 (from the archives)

ORDINARY GRACE won just about all the awards the crime fiction community has to offer that year, and it is easy to see why. In this book, Krueger takes a break from his series detective and steps into a story that is timeless, and the crime, although not incidental, is not the primary attraction here.

The story takes place in a small Minnesota town in 1961. (The period detail is superb). Nathan Drum is a minister. He was set to be a lawyer until the war took any desire for courtroom combat out of him. This career change doesn't sit well with his wife, an atheist, who saw her life unfolding differently. But the family grows, with a daughter and two sons. Our narrator is Frank, a thirteen year old, who also serves as our detective when things begin to go awry. Much of the drama concerns the Drums' relationship with a family down the road that represents the life Mrs. Drum hoped to have.

This is book is about prejudice, the striving of ordinary men to do good, the misreadings that children make of adult situations, the conflict between the religious and the nonreligious, the rush to judgment both a town and its ill-prepared police force almost makes.

It is a deep and lovely written book that is worth your time. Highly recommended.


Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Short Story Wednesday, Ron Scheer looks at LIVIN' ON JACKS AND QUEENS,

 

Robert J. Randisi, ed., Livin’ on Jacks and Queens

This is an entertaining anthology of 14 stories about gamblers and gambling in the Old West. Editor Randisi has assembled a notable gathering of western writers, providing an array of storytelling styles and imaginative treatments of the subject. The names of several contributors will be quickly recognized: Johnny Boggs, John D. Nesbitt, Matthew P. Mayo, Nik Morton, and Chuck Tyrell.

To these he has added a story of his own, plus the yarns of two women writers who may be new to some readers: Christine Matthews and Lori Van Pelt.

My favorites of the bunch include Ms. Matthews’ “Odds on a Lawman,” which tells of a succession of sheriffs who each assumes a tenure of service to a frontier town, before dying or disappearing for various reasons, on which the townsmen place bets until the turn of events claims one of them the winner. It’s an amusing and well-written tale that brings its Dickensian cast of characters to entertaining life, while we wait to see the fate that befalls each of the town’s series of sheriffs.

For a colorful portrayal of the daily life and business of a riverboat gambler, Nik Morton brings that world vividly to life in his story, “Hazard.” In “Acey-Deucey,” John D. Nesbitt’s central character is hired by a woman to retrieve an emerald pendant once given to her by a paramour. Finally locating the current owner of the gem, he has to win a game of cards before he can take possession of it.

Robert Randisi
Randisi’s story, “Horseshoes and Pistols” is so quirky, I kept thinking that it qualified as Twilight Zone material. In it, two men are forced to bet their lives on a game of horseshoes. Matthew Mayo’s “Pay the Ferryman” veers off in another direction, as a man on the run escapes into what might well be called “the heart of darkness.”

My favorite story in the collection was penned by a favorite storyteller, Chuck Tyrell. His “Great Missouri River Steamship Race” evokes a period of river travel from the point of view of a youngster working as a fireman aboard a steamship with a regular route between St. Louis and Fort Benton. Tyrell brings his gifts for characterization, dialogue, and suspense to this story with its echoes of Huckleberry Finn.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Monday, May 26, 2025

Monday, Monday


 Reading RIPLEY UNDERGROUND, which is enjoyable. Love the linear, single POV plot.

Just recovering from the flu and jetlag so a very quiet week. Watching YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS, MURDERBOT, THE STUDIO and a Danish thriller series, SECRETS THEY KEEP, which was pretty good if scary.  

Rewatched BEFORE SUNSET. Always enjoy that trilogy. 

There was a nice article about Megan in the Washington Post. If you can get by the paywall. "Megan Abbott and the lure of private worlds" Lots of cool photos.

Finally feels like Spring here.

How about you? 

How about you? 

Friday, May 23, 2025

FFB: MICHIGAN ROLL, Tom Kakonis

 
Forgotten Books for May 30, 2008

Ken Bruen’s Forgotten Book

Michigan Roll by Tom Kakonis

The great neglected forgotten writer in my opinion is Tom Kakonis.


He wrote a wondrous series of novels featuring an ex professor who'd served time and is now eking out a precarious existence in Las Vegas under the dubious mentorship of a very shady acquaintance.
The writing is dark dangerous poetry and the violence when it comes, is sharp and shocking, an air of doomed menace looms over the novels like a palpable cloud.
Michigan Roll, perhaps the very best in the series,, is a true forgotten classic.
Kakonis abandoned this stunning series and now writes under a different name.
The atmosphere of being damned, of no hope, of no redemption is noir like you rarely read.
The characterization is superb and the sheer agony of seeing a decent man who never caught a break and knows he is screwed is heart wrenching.


Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Short Story Wednesday: "The Piano Tuner"s Wives" William Trevor (The New Yorker)


 https://www.newyorker.com/podcast/fiction/yiyun-li-reads-william-trevor

 

The piano tuner is a blind man who marries Violet and later Belle. This is a ghost story as much as a love story. Belle's real interest is the now dead Violet and her competition with her.

It especially drives her crazy that Owen would have chosen the less attractive woman first. Although the less attractive woman was a devoted wife and companion. And what does a blind man know of beauty. Except that of the soul.

Above the story is read by Yiyun Li who chose the story. I am a great fan of William Trevor's stories and novels. The discussion after her reading of the story is good too if you have an hour and fifteen minutes to spare.   

George Kelley

Jerry House 

TracyK 

Todd Mason 

Kevin Tipple

Monday, May 19, 2025

Monday, May 12, 2025

Monday, May 05, 2025