Wednesday, February 29, 2012
The next installment is up
King Canute - Powder Burn Flash
On a High Wire - Flash Fiction Offensive
I've got the next two episodes drafted, the first of them sent out for review. I hope today's shot of Irish noir hits the spot.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Review of Prague Fatale by Philip Kerr (Quercus, 2011)
The four great strengths of Kerr’s Bernie Gunther series is the historicization within the Nazi regime, a strong noir voice, the lead character - a self-loathing, cynical, cantankerous cop with a moral core - and well constructed stories. Prague Fatale delivers on the first two of these in spades. Kerr drops us into Berlin and Prague in 1941, the politics, the power-games within the Nazi regime, the suffering, the resistance. He evokes a very strong sense of place and time. The prose and dialogue are excellent, as usual. The novel is slightly let down, however, by the latter two. Kerr’s other Gunther novels use movement through time and space as a means to develop the main character and drive the story. Prague Fatale is a fairly static book, divided into two, and there is a linear time narrative with the story set over a few weeks. The first part is set in Berlin and provides the set-up, the second, longer part, in Heydrich’s estate just outside of Prague. It is a locked room mystery, with a notable nod to Agatha Christie. The characterisation as a whole is good, and the story is full of real-life senior Nazis, however we learn very little new about Gunther. And whilst the story is historically embedded in what was happening in Berlin and Prague at the time, it is somewhat long-winded and lacking pace compared with the earlier books (and probably double the length of Christie’s locked room mysteries). In my view, the Prague section of the story would have benefitted from losing a good thirty to fifty pages or more. And part of the ending was telegraphed from a very long way out. That said, this is still a good, entertaining read, just not quite up there with the other Gunther books in my mind. As ever, though, I look forward to the next in one of my favourite series.
Monday, February 27, 2012
15 shots of noir
Daniel O'Shea, Old Country (Snubnose Press)
The Summer of Fishing, Shackleton's Hooch, Pink Cadillac
Patti Abbott, Monkey Justice (Snubnose Press)
Like A Hawk Rising, The Snake Charmer
Chris Rhatigan, Watch You Drown (Pulp Metal Fiction)
In the Hard Nowhere, The Sidewinder
Keith Rawson, The Chaos We Know (Snubnose Press)
An Appointment with Larry, My World Without Jenna
Paul Brazill, 13 Shots of Noir (Untreed Reads)
The Tut, Anger Management
Rancid Dusk by Cheryl Anne Gardner (Flash Fiction Offensive)
Aftermath by Jake Hinkson (Flash Fiction Offensive)*
Lost places by Matthew C Funk (Shotgun Honey)*
Head Shot by Cindy Rosmus (Thrillers, Chillers and Killers)
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Lazy Sunday Service
Bette Davis famously noted that "Old age ain't no place for sissies." In these stories the protagonists may not all be old, but ain't none of them young anymore. They're past the solipsism of youth, that grandiose narcissism that lets the young imagine the world as a stage devoted to their glories. Every character in Old School knows that life isn't a stage, it's a ring. And you'd better learn to take a punch, because life is the undefeated heavyweight champion of the world. You might land a shot here and there, but you are gonna get your ass beat and, in the end, you're going down for the count. Life is however-many-billions and 0, and each of us is just one more digit on the wrong end of that equation.
My posts this week
Seven shots of noir
Finally entered the world of e-books
Scattergun reading
Review of Or The Bull Kills You by Jason Webster
Damned if you do, damned if you don't: An Bord Pleanala and the Children's hospital
It's time to get serious about unfinished estates
Peppered tail
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Peppered tail
‘Hear what?’ Ned hissed back.
‘That click.’
‘No.’
They were creeping round a small store on a suburban high street, a dark apartment above.
A stair creaked.
‘Oh fuck!’ John muttered, heading for the backdoor they’d forced open.
The lights switched on, revealing the two hooded intruders.
‘Stay where you are!’ a man shouted.
‘Run!’ Ned yelled.
They exited into a dimly-lit laneway.
‘Stop!’
The night air filled with the explosion of a shotgun.
‘Oh fuck,’ Ned moaned. ‘My arse!’
‘Keep moving! If we get caught, it’ll get a worse seeing to in prison.’
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words.
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Review of Or The Bull Kills You by Jason Webster (2011, Chatto & Windus)
The real strength of Or The Bull Kills You is the sense of place, the detailing of the history and culture of bullfighting, and the insights into the political machinations of local politics and the police system. The characterisation is relatively standard fare: Camara is the talented but awkward cop who rails against the system and falls easily into women’s beds; the other characters are fine without lighting up the page. The plot works okay until near the end, when it starts to become a little ragged and the finale is contrived for dramatic effect which works to undermine the credibility of the tale. There were also some elements that didn’t seem to add up in my mind. A nice touch is the theme of impotence that runs throughout. Overall, an interesting, competent first novel that needed a little more consistency of plot to go with the well developed sense of place and history.
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Scattergun reading
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Finally entered the world of e-books
Monday, February 20, 2012
Seven shots of noir
These are the short stories I read during the past seven days:
Reno by Chris Leek (Near to the Knuckle)
Mexican Souvenirs by Eric Beetner (Thrillers, Chillers and Killers)
Idle Hands by Tina Lonergan (Clean White Pages)
Bacon by Cormac Brown (A Twist of Noir)
The day traders (pt2) by Peter Farris (Shotgun Honey)
Moonshine by Seth Sherwood (Spinetingler)
Portrait of an American Family by Benoit Lelievre (Shotgun Honey)
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Lazy Sunday Service
My posts this week
Seven shots of noir
Review of When Money Dies by Adam Fergusson
Which country is the next big thing in crime fiction?
Lifting the load: Help for people with mortgage arrears
Review of Nobody's Perfect by Donald Westlake
On a high wire
The long walk
Saturday, February 18, 2012
The long walk
‘We need the money.’
‘You could just sell it.’
‘It’s worth fuck all and we’ll get more this way. This’ll do.’
The car pulled to a stop and the two men exited onto the narrow lane. In the distance the city cast the clouds in an orange glow.
They pushed the car into the ditch, doused it with petrol, lit a match, then WHOOSH!
‘Fuck!’
‘Now what?’ the driver asked, mesmerized by the dancing flames.
‘We walk home and wait for the cheque.’
‘Walk? Fuck. The cheque’s gonna get there before us!’
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words
Friday, February 17, 2012
On a High Wire
Review of Nobody’s Perfect by Donald Westlake (The Mysterious Press, 1977)
Folly Leads Man to Ruin would have been a much better title for this book than Nobody’s Perfect. Dortmunder’s follies pile up one after the other, each leading to a more precarious future. Westlake keeps up a steady pace, with a series of nicely constructed and clever set pieces that are strung together into a plot divided into four parts. There is a gentle humour running throughout and a few genuine belly laughs. The characterisation is well observed, with a good mix of likeable rogues. For me, the story was a little let down through a lack of edginess or grit and the book seemed to stop about ten to fifteen pages too short. Also the premise around the insurance scam as it entered the last quarter didn’t stand up to much scrutiny. Nevertheless, an enjoyable read from a powerhouse of comic crime storytelling.
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Publishing Perspectives: Which Country is the Next Big Thing in Crime Fiction?
As the comment by Declan Burke on the PP website makes clear, there are a healthy number of Irish authors publishing crime fiction set in Ireland or abroad - John Connolly, Tana French, Colin Bateman, Alex Barclay, Ken Bruen, Stuart Neville, Benjamin Black, Adrian McKinty, Arlene Hunt, Conor Fitzgerald, Eoin Colfer, Declan Hughes, Eoin McNamee, William Ryan, Brian McGilloway, Gene Kerrigan, Niamh O’Connor, Alan Glynn, Cora Harrison, Jane Casey, John J. Gaynard, Gerard Brennan, Casey Hill, Gerard O’Donovan, Kevin McCarthy, KT McCaffrey, Cormac Millar, Paul Charles, Sam Millar, Claire McGowan, Garbhan Downey, John Brady and Declan Burke himself. And good stuff it is too. Check it out, if you haven't already.
Other countries presently making their mark? In my view, Scotland, South Africa, Australia and Italy.
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Review of When Money Dies by Adam Fergusson (1975)
In 1914, 20 German Marks equalled a British pound. By 1924 a British pound was equal to the number of yards to the sun and Germany was all but a barter economy. The First World War had left Germany on its financial knees, though its industrial base remained strong. The payments to the allies under the Versailles Treaty hung heavily on the struggling economy. Gradually inflation started to rise, devaluing the mark against foreign currencies. This allowed German business to grow, but the domestic economy started to spiral out of control. The Reichsbank’s solution was to increase wages and print more money to enable the populace to purchase goods. And as prices increased, the denominations of notes increased, and the value of savings and pensions plummeted. It soon became apparent that the only way to extract the value of money was to immediately spend it as Germany entered a period of hyper-inflation (when the value of money at the end of a month was worth half that at the start). By 1923, it was not uncommon for salaries to be raised several times a month to keep pace with inflation. Unable to pay the reparations to the Allies, the French and Belgians moved into the Ruhr, Germany’s industrial heartland, to seize and exploit its assets, further weakening the economy and its ability to make such payments. Whilst people suffered, unemployment remained quite low, however by 1924 it was clear that a new strategy was needed to end the madness of exponential inflation. The solution was to introduce a new currency with a stable commodity base and to move the economy onto it, and to balance the books to reduce the need for deficit finance. The result, whilst curbing inflation, was a massive drop in industrial production as German goods became more expensive on the world market leading to mass unemployment. Although not directly responsible for the rise of National Socialism, Fergusson makes a good case that the turbulence of economic circumstance, the disenfranchisement of the middle classes, and the rise of unemployment helped provide the conditions within which it could grow.
Adam Fergusson does an admirable job of detailing for a lay audience what happened with the German economy in the early 1920s. He uses a mix of historical sources, including letters, British diplomatic material, and newspaper reports. Sometimes the narrative is a little dry and it would have been good to include more detail on Austria and Hungary, the strategy of German industrialists, and the French/Belgian intervention in the Ruhr. Although not its intention, what the book demonstrates is the value of the European project in binding Europe into a common monetary framework that makes it easier for countries whose economy is in trouble to weather financial storms. As the present crisis demonstrates, that process is not always straightforward and easy, and is fraught with difficult politics and decisions, but what Fergusson’s book highlights is that trying to cope on their own with politicians who seem clueless about core economic principles can be a hell of a lot worse.
Monday, February 13, 2012
Seven shots of noir
Convergence by John Spaert (Flash Fiction Offensive)*
The Confessor by Lonni Lees (Shotgun Honey)
Cosmo in the mourning by Gary Clifton (Spinetingler)
Sleep tight by Jack Bates (Near to the Knuckle)
Pimp Inc (c) by Nick Mott (Flash Fiction Offensive)
Goes around by Sandra Seamans (Shotgun Honey)
The hater's club by Len Kuntz (Near to the Knuckle)
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Lazy Sunday Service
My posts this week
Seven shots of noir
CIF, Future Housing Supply in Ireland report - one year on
Review of Head Games by Craig McDonald
Unfinished estates in post-Celtic Tiger Ireland
Ghost estates
Embrace the destroyers of your world
She wrecks my head
Saturday, February 11, 2012
She wrecks my head
‘What?’ The boss looked up.
‘She ... she wrecks my head.’
‘She does what?’
‘Look ... I can’t work with her. She ... How about I work with Kirsty instead?’
‘I don’t want you to work with Kirsty.’
The young man looked pained.
‘What’s wrong with Carla?’ the boss asked.
‘Nothing. Nothing’s wrong with Carla. That’s the problem.’
‘The problem?’
‘She wrecks my head.’
‘Oh. You fancy Carla? Our Carla?’
The man looked away, his face flushed red.
‘Carla. Wow. Well, I guess you have three choices: concentrate, resign, or ask her on a date.’
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words
Friday, February 10, 2012
Embrace the destroyers of your world
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Ghost estates
NIRSA Working Paper 67 – Unfinished Estates in Post-Celtic Tiger Ireland by Rob Kitchin, Cian O’Callaghan and Justin Gleeson.
Summary
In the wake of the global financial crisis, and the ongoing financial and fiscal crisis in Europe, much attention has focused on Ireland and its beleaguered economy given its status as one of the PIIGS and the fact that it had to be bailed out by the troika of the IMF, EU and ECB in November 2010. Whilst much of the gaze has been directed at Ireland’s banks and the strategy of the Irish government to manage the crisis, a substantial amount of interest, both nationally and internationally, has been focused on the property sector and in particular the phenomenon of so-called ‘ghost estates’ (or in official terms, unfinished estates). As of October 2011 there were 2,846 such estates in Ireland and they have come to visibly symbolise the collapse of Ireland’s ‘Celtic Tiger’ economy. In this paper, we examine the unfinished estates phenomenon, placing them within the context of Ireland’s property boom during the Celtic Tiger years. We detail the characteristics and geography of such estates, the various problems afflicting the estates and their residents, and the Irish government’s response to addressing those problems. In the final section we speculate as to the fate of such estates given the approach adopted and the wider political and economic landscape.
Full paper is here.
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Review of Head Games by Craig McDonald (Bleak House Books, 2007)
This was a book of two halves for me. The first half was a dark, screwball noir, with a strong plot and a suite of interesting characters, both fictional and real. Indeed, the book contains a number of real characters and is rooted in the real myths surrounding Villa’s missing head. McDonald provides a rich and colourful back story for Lassiter, with a good degree of depth and complexity to his personality. The story has a good sense of place, historical context, and the right kind of feel as a literary pulp noir story as Lassiter would have written it. It hummed along like a well tuned engine. The second half of the book, however, seemed to run out of pace and ideas, with the last quarter in particular becoming bitty, with a faltering pace and staccato story line. If the second half could have kept the same pace and feel of the first half, this would have unquestionably been a five star read. The unevenness, however, pulled it back into the pack. More than enough here though for me to seek out other McDonald books.
Monday, February 6, 2012
Seven shots of noir
How we roll by Matthew C Funk (Shotgun Honey)*
A day in the death of Stafford Plank by Stuart Aylis (Flash Fiction Offensive)*
Showtime by Albert Tucher (Spinetingler)*
Hells Express by John L Thompson (Shotgun Honey)
Saving Cletus Brockton by Jim Harrington (Powder Burn Flash)
A pain in the ass by Phil Beloin (Pulp Pusher)
The body by Andrew Hilbert (Flash Fiction Offensive)
Sunday, February 5, 2012
Lazy Sunday Service
My posts this week
Short story heaven
Dublin falls from 12th to 198th (out of 200) in Brookings Global MetroMonitor
Review of The Cold, Cold Ground by Adrian McKinty
Medidan book award
IDA job losses and creation 2007-2011 by region and county
Casanova succumbs to Two Ton Tina
CSO property price changes 2005-2011
Property market by sector and region 2011
January reads
A little encouragement
Saturday, February 4, 2012
A little encouragement
Michael glanced up nervously, scratching at a grubby shirt. 'I ... I'm working on it.'
'Perhaps you need to work harder?' Doyle lifted up a baseball bat, wiggling its tip menacingly.
'I ... I definitely won't be able to get it if I can't walk.'
'You don't seem to be able to pay it back as it is. Perhaps you need a little encouragement?'
'I'll pay it back, Mr Doyle. I promise.'
'I know you will, Michael.'
Doyle swung the bat, tight and fast.
Michael yelped as his wrist snapped with an audible crack.
A drabble is a story of exactly 100 words
Friday, February 3, 2012
January reads
The Cold, Cold Ground by Adrian McKinty *****
The Eighty Five Billion Euro Man by Donal Conaty ***
The Dead Detective by William Heffernan ***
Black Sheep by Arlene Hunt ***.5
Storm Front by Jim Butcher *****
Devil's Peak by Deon Meyer ****.5
In a Lonely Place by Dorothy B Hughes ****
White Nights by Ann Cleeves ****