Review: A CASE OF NOIR by Paul D. Brazill

A Case of Noir by Paul D. Brazil takes readers on a dark and twisted road through five chapters. Even though each one is a fairly contained short story, the five chapters link together to form a complex tale featuring Luke Case.

Except his name isn’t really Luke Case. Not that readers know that as the first installment, “Red Esperanto” opens. Instead, readers know it is Warsaw in winter and our narrator prefers Jack Daniels with Coke only after he is so drunk already that he shouldn’t be drinking at all, a Ukrainian hooker by the name of Tatiana, and hanging out with a fellow ex-pat by the name of Sean Bradley. Sean has his reasons why he drinks heavily as does Luke and their lives are going to be intertwined as the months and pages pass.

It is while with Sean in their favorite watering hole, “Rory’s Irish Pub” that the stunning C. J. walked in very late one night. Known as Crazy Jola, she is the wife of Robert Mohawk who is a mid-level a gangster of some repute. Despite being warned off about his reputation as well as hers, Luke manages to talk her into a drink and eventually quite a lot more.

Considering his past, he should have stopped while he was ahead. A Case of Noir is a complicated stylistic read full of visual imagery that moves across Europe adding and dropping people and clues as it goes. While Luke Case has a fake name and a fake cover he has his vices no matter what and that means he leaves a trail in his wake. A complicated dark trail as strikingly depicted on the cover with the maze and one that isn’t at all easy to figure out from start to finish.

A Case of Noir
Paul D. Brazill
http://www.pauldbrazill.com
Lite Editions
http://www.lite-editions.com/
ISBN# 978-8866655053
May 2014
Paperback (also available e-book)
134 Pages
$8.99

E-book version supplied by the author some time ago in exchange for my objective review.

Kevin R. Tipple ©2014, 2015

Review: THE DEVIL’S FOOTPRINTS: A HUNTER KINCAID SHORT STORY by Billy Kring

Border Patrol Agent Hunter Kincaid has never seen anything like the tracks she is seeing in the Big Bend area of Texas as this short story opens. The tracks are fist sized and don’t show any signs of toes, claws, or anything human or animal. Round and fist sized the tracks are uniformly spaced and show no signs of hesitation or adjusting to the terrain. Whatever it was came across the river and relentlessly marched through and just kept going.

Hunter followed the tracks which came through the river at what it known as “Mora’s Crossing” and isn’t about to stop. The tracks made their way from there to the Simmons Ranch where they seem to have gone right through the barbwire fence without missing a step. They then seem to lead into a very dangerous area known as Los Embudos or “The Funnels.” Hunter continues to pursue the tracks into the area and works to solve the mystery of The Devil’s Footprints: A Hunter Kincaid Short Story.

This highly entertaining short story is well worth your time. The Devil’s Footprints: A Hunter Kincaid Short Story is part of the Hunter Kincaid Mystery Series and features an interesting main character, a case not easily solved, and plenty of action to keep the reader turning the page.

The Devil’s Footprints: A Hunter Kincaid Short Story
Billy Kring
http://www.billykring.com
Self-Published
January 2014
ASIN: B00HARTW8M
E-Book Only
21 Pages
$0.99

Material was recently purchased to read and review using funds in my Amazon Associate account.

Kevin R. Tipple ©2015

THE TELL (A Mystery Flash Story) http://kingsriverlife.com/08/08/the-tell-mystery-flash-fiction/
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Review: HARD TACK (1991) by Barbara D’Amato

Journalist Catherine “Cat” Marsala is torn when Hal Briskman, editor of Chicago Today, approaches her about doing a story for the publication. As a freelancer and, the reader gathers, as someone who prides herself on being professional, she welcomes a paying assignment. As a non-swimmer who nearly drowned in childhood, the assignment worries her.

The assignment consists of boarding the yacht of a wealthy businessman and his wife on Fourth of July weekend and sailing around Lake Michigan with them and a group of their wealthy friends. “Get a lot on how you sail a boat,” Hal tells her. “How the very rich live. Are they really different from other people? Do they have class? What is class? What do they eat? Do they wear diamonds at the wheel? Brush their teeth in champagne?”

If Cat didn’t accept the assignment, there would be neither a book nor this review. (Saw that coming, didn’t you?)

Her hosts, the owners of the yacht Easy Girl, are Will Honeywell, president of the manufacturing company Honeywell Furniture, and his wife Belinda. Their guests include their son Bill and his friend Mary Shaughnessy, a second-year student at Yale Law School; Dr. Daniel Silverman, sports medicine specialist; Belinda’s brother Dr. Greg Mandel, a well-known Chicago surgeon, and his wife Twinkie, who owns a successful jewelry boutique; Takuro Tsunami, an engineer; Bret Falcon, a young Broadway star who hopes to make it in films, too;  and Chuck Kroop, another furniture manufacturer who, along with the Honeywells, financed Bret’s successful Broadway musical Off and On. Also aboard is a young man named Emery Langmar, who is the yacht’s sole crewman and who waits on the guests as often as he deals with nautical matters.

Cat’s fears that she might be regarded as an unwanted outsider are quickly disposed of; the Honeywells and most of their guests treat her cordially. The Honeywells and some of the others teach her the fine points of sailing, and she takes to it enthusiastically. But, as a reader might expect, tensions develop among the guests as their voyage goes on. Twinkie Mandel, for instance, is quite flirtatious, which doesn’t sit well with her husband. Chuck Kroop, in particular, is coarse, overbearing, and fond of inappropriately touching the women aboard–especially Twinkie.

Greg eventually confronts Chuck, and a violent fight erupts. Chuck turns murderous, and is only subdued when Daniel Silverman forcibly administers a shot of Valium. He’s then carried to the master stateroom and locked in. The Easy Girl encounters a dangerous night of stormy weather during which nobody gets any sleep save for the narcotized Chuck. Those who needn’t be on deck congregate below, most in the area of the galley. This gives them a good view of the door to the master stateroom.

So when Chuck is discovered with his throat cut, it seems at first reasonable to assume he committed suicide. The nature of his death and the nature of his wounds suggest otherwise. Suicides don‘t usually cut their own throats–even when they’re not loopy from a shot of Valium. They find quicker and less painful methods of killing themselves. But how could it be murder when nobody saw anyone enter or leave the stateroom? The impossible aspect of the situation makes it all the more chilling to Cat, not least because the yacht is becalmed after the storm and its motor will not start because of water in the fuel line. Its communications equipment has been sabotaged. She and the others are thus trapped on a boat with an unknown murderer.

As I have mentioned elsewhere, impossible crime stories–which category subsumes locked-room puzzles–are my favorite types of mysteries, whether sedate or hardboiled. I’m a sucker for them, though unfortunately some of them suck. Hard Tack is not one of those. I found it quite entertaining, even if the locked-room murder method, when finally revealed, strained credulity as many such methods are wont to do. Cat Marsala’s first-person narration is lively, leavened with humor that’s sometimes sassy but seldom snarky, and maintains a good pace. (I knew I liked her when, in the first chapter, she said she had packed two novels to take along on the trip: John Dickson Carr’s The Three Coffins and The Judas Window.) In keeping with the tradition of many Golden Age mysteries, Barbara D’Amato provides the reader with a sketch of the Easy Girl and its below-deck layout.

The caveats? The murder doesn’t occur until a little more than halfway through, the lead-up time being devoted to character interaction and development, and a lot of discussions about the fine points of sailing and what kinds of conditions sailors encounter and how they contend with them. (D’Amato provides a glossary of nautical terms at the back of the book.) Some readers may grow impatient, especially if they’re landlubbers. I’m one of those, but I was neither impatient nor bored. Besides which, some of the information is crucial to the murder’s solution.

All things considered, Hard Tack is a pretty good mystery.

© 2010 Barry Ergang

Barry Ergang’s locked-room mystery novelette, “The Play of Light and Shadow,” is available at Smashwords and Amazon.

Fall 2015 Cover Reveal

The cover for the debut issue of Flash Bang Mysteries, which goes live in October of 2015, is here! Please check it out and let us know what you think. As you will notice, Warren Bull’s story, THE INTERVIEW, is featured on the cover. Picking the cover story was quite difficult, because all of the accepted stories are amazing. However, in the end, there can be only one, and we’d like to congratulate Warren for earning that distinction.

FBM Fall 2015 Cover Final