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Seattle Noir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“Featuring short, edgy fiction on the Emerald City’s seamy underbelly . . . seedy characters, private detectives and the like from all over urban Seattle.” —Kitsap Daily News
 
Early Seattle was a hardscrabble seaport filled with merchant sailors, longshoremen, lumberjacks, rowdy saloons, and a rough-and-tumble police force not immune to corruption and graft. Now it’s home to big businesses and a flourishing art, theatre, and club scene. Seattle’s evolution to high-finance and high-tech has simply provided even greater opportunity and reward to those who might be ethically, morally, or economically challenged (crooks, in other words).
 
Seattle Noir features stories by G.M. Ford, Skye Moody, R. Barri Flowers, Thomas P. Hopp, Patricia Harrington, Bharti Kirchner, Kathleen Alcalá, Simon Wood, Brian Thornton, Lou Kemp, Curt Colbert, Robert Lopresti, Paul S. Piper, and Stephan Magcosta. You’ll find tales of a wealthy couple whose marriage is filled with not-so-quiet desperation; a credit card scam that goes over-limit; femmes fatales and hommes fatales; a group of mystery writers whose fiction causes friction; a Native American shaman caught in a web of secrets and tribal allegiances; sex, lies, and slippery slopes . . .
 
“Stories that reflect Seattle’s ethnic diversity as well as tales from its rough past to its glory days of Boeing, Starbucks and Microsoft.” —Publishers Weekly
 
“A new collection of stories all set in Seattle, with characters that break the mold. In many of the Seattle Noir stories, it’s the heroes, not the subsidiary characters, that are African-American, Native-American, Hispanic-American.” —The Seattle Times
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 13, 2009
      If the 14 entries in Akashic's rainy city noir volume were school compositions, a teacher would likely assign mostly As and Bs and nothing below a C. Colbert has assembled stories that reflect Seattle's ethnic diversity (Native American, East Indian, Chinese, Latino, etc.) as well as tales from its rough past to its glory days of Boeing, Starbucks and Microsoft. Notable selections include Colbert's “Till Death Do Us...,” featuring 1940s PI Jake Rossiter, and G.M. Ford's wry “Food for Thought,” but two of the best come from nonmystery writers, Bharti Kirchner's disturbing “Promised Tulips” and Kathleen Alcalá's stark “Blue Sunday.” Brian Thornton's “Paper Son” provides a seamy look at corruption and vice in Seattle's Chinatown in the late 1800s. Patricia Harrington's “What Price Retribution?” demonstrates that people may be homeless, but they aren't necessarily helpless. Other contributors include Robert Lopresti, Skye Moody, Simon Wood and R. Barri Flowers.

    • Booklist

      May 1, 2009
      Is Seattle too nice for noir? It is home to the original Skid Road, the Green River Killer, and the second most popular suicide bridge in the nation and yet perhaps too laid-back and politically correct to embrace the genres viciousness and depravity. Of the many varied shades of local color on display in this mixed but worthwhile collection, only a few have the inky chiaroscuro found in Akashic noir entries from Brooklyn or Detroit, among them Stephan Magcostas nightmarish tale of a bad encounter between an Iraqi war widow and a cabdriver and Lou Kemps twisted, gothic Sherlockian pastiche. Other standouts include Simon Woods taut tale of a bar brawler recruited into a life-changing club, Robert Loprestis demented dialogue between homeless murder witnesses, Curt Colberts clipped Jake Rossiter detective yarn (crossing O. Henry with Hammett), and Skye Moodys memorable funhouse tale of embittered showbiz dwarfs and hothouse flowers that could be Nathaniel Wests Day of the Locust as told by Tom Robbins. Fourteen original stories that may well be of interest beyond the Northwest.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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