Jerry Thompson (4)
Autore di Oakland Noir
Per altri autori con il nome Jerry Thompson, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.
3+ opere 91 membri 28 recensioni
Opere di Jerry Thompson
Opere correlate
Freedom in this Village: Twenty-Five Years of Black Gay Men's Writing (2005) — Collaboratore — 81 copie
Voices Rising: Celebrating 20 Years of Black Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Writing (Other Countries) (2006) — Collaboratore — 22 copie
Etichette
2017 (1)
2020 (1)
Afroamericano (2)
Akashic Books Noir Series (1)
Akashic Noir (2)
Antologia (7)
ARC (1)
Bay Area (4)
Berkeley (2)
Berkeley (California) (1)
Berkeley fiction (1)
California (6)
città (1)
computer room window bookshelf (1)
da leggere (1)
Early Reviewers (4)
EBook (2)
EBRL (2)
giallo/thriller/suspense (1)
gritty (1)
idee (1)
imported-2023-12-28 (2)
letto nel 2018 (1)
March 2020 (1)
Mistero (8)
Moe's Books Berkeley (1)
mystery|thriller|suspense (2)
Narrativa (8)
noir (6)
noir fiction (2)
non letto (2)
Nook (2)
Oakland (4)
PS572 (1)
racconti (6)
Romanzo poliziesco (1)
Stati Uniti d'America (4)
storie (1)
tbl2022 (1)
XXI secolo (2)
Informazioni generali
Non ci sono ancora dati nella Conoscenza comune per questo autore. Puoi aiutarci.
Utenti
Recensioni
Berkeley Noir di Jerry Thompson
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
These Akashic anthologies vary greatly in quality. Some seem to be full of stories selected by misguided editors that don't come anywhere near achieving even a passing resemblance to noir. Some have stories that are so awful you wonder why they were published. Some (Atlanta Noir) are almost consistently great. Berkeley noir is nearer the top of the list. It has no unreadable clunkers, although two or three of these stories don't quite come together. But overall, this collection provides a great picture of the underside of the city and is well-written (unlike the pseudo-gibberish of the introduction--introductions seem to be a consistent problem for the series.) In any case, dig in.… (altro)
Segnalato
datrappert | 14 altre recensioni | Aug 16, 2021 | Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I have definitely become a fan of this Akashic Noir series of short story collections. "Berkeley Noir" contains stories that are simultaneously poignant and shocking. It conveys a definite sense of a seething undercurrent beneath a shiny, upscale veneer. Several stories capture the vulnerability that accompanies loneliness in a manner that makes the reader struggle to resolve the morality of the characters' choices. In others, love ameliorates morally ambiguous choices. Very good read!
Segnalato
hemlokgang | 14 altre recensioni | Nov 27, 2020 | Berkeley Noir is an anthology of noir short stories that take place in Berkeley, that famous next-door neighbor of San Francisco known for its protests and activism. In many ways, this anthology fulfills all the stereotypes of Berkeley while challenging them and subverting them with other stories. I think the editors, Jerry Thompson and Owen Hill, did a superb job of selecting stories.
Rather than organizing their stories by some emotional theme, they went for simple geography. The different sections of the anthology are grouped by locale and yet that creates a sort of emotional geography of its own as different neighborhoods have different vibes.
I loved “Hill House” the housesitting nightmare and the self-sacrificing love and grief of “The Tangy Brine of Dark Night.” One of my favorite stories is “Lucky Day” about a relatively new employee of the Berkeley Public Library. “Eat Your Pheasant, Drink Your Wine” has a truly original narrative voice. That’s true of “Every Man and Every Woman Is a Star” as well and now I have got to read more by Nick Mamatas. Susan Dunlap’s “The Law of Local Karma” will feel familiar and solid to fans of Dunlap which I am. “Dear Fellow Graduates” is one of those short stories with a punch line and I loved it. I thought “Frederick Douglass Elementary” was thought-provoking and all-too-real. “Righteous Kill” feels very topical as it has a unique solution to gentrification.
There were only two stories I did not care for. “Identity Theft” was simply too horrific for me despite being well-written. I admire the skill and shrink from the subject. However, nothing can save “Boy Toy” which felt like nothing more than the taxonomy of sailing. Here’s the thing, some people do research and it informs their writing. Others do research and it becomes their writing. It seems as though the author took an illustrated diagram of a sailboat and decided to use every specialized word in it. It did not contribute to the story, it detracted.
I liked Berkeley Noir a lot. I love the Akashic Noir series and my favorites in the series are those where the authors feel no need to show off by stretching the boundaries of noir and instead seek deeply into noir fiction. In my opinion, going deep into traditional noir shows more understanding than stretching noir out of its traditional space. This Thompson and Hill did very well. It’s no blemish on this that I did not like every story. Liking every story in a multi-author anthology would be weird and indicate the editors didn’t do a good job of including diverse points of view and stories. I expect to dislike at least one story in every anthology with multiple authors. As usual, this newest addition to the Noir series is excellent.
I received an e-galley of Berkeley Noir from the publisher through Edelweiss
Berkeley Noir at Akashic Books
Akashic Noir series
Jerry Thompson author bio
Owen Hill author bio
https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2020/09/10/9781617757976/… (altro)
Rather than organizing their stories by some emotional theme, they went for simple geography. The different sections of the anthology are grouped by locale and yet that creates a sort of emotional geography of its own as different neighborhoods have different vibes.
I loved “Hill House” the housesitting nightmare and the self-sacrificing love and grief of “The Tangy Brine of Dark Night.” One of my favorite stories is “Lucky Day” about a relatively new employee of the Berkeley Public Library. “Eat Your Pheasant, Drink Your Wine” has a truly original narrative voice. That’s true of “Every Man and Every Woman Is a Star” as well and now I have got to read more by Nick Mamatas. Susan Dunlap’s “The Law of Local Karma” will feel familiar and solid to fans of Dunlap which I am. “Dear Fellow Graduates” is one of those short stories with a punch line and I loved it. I thought “Frederick Douglass Elementary” was thought-provoking and all-too-real. “Righteous Kill” feels very topical as it has a unique solution to gentrification.
There were only two stories I did not care for. “Identity Theft” was simply too horrific for me despite being well-written. I admire the skill and shrink from the subject. However, nothing can save “Boy Toy” which felt like nothing more than the taxonomy of sailing. Here’s the thing, some people do research and it informs their writing. Others do research and it becomes their writing. It seems as though the author took an illustrated diagram of a sailboat and decided to use every specialized word in it. It did not contribute to the story, it detracted.
I liked Berkeley Noir a lot. I love the Akashic Noir series and my favorites in the series are those where the authors feel no need to show off by stretching the boundaries of noir and instead seek deeply into noir fiction. In my opinion, going deep into traditional noir shows more understanding than stretching noir out of its traditional space. This Thompson and Hill did very well. It’s no blemish on this that I did not like every story. Liking every story in a multi-author anthology would be weird and indicate the editors didn’t do a good job of including diverse points of view and stories. I expect to dislike at least one story in every anthology with multiple authors. As usual, this newest addition to the Noir series is excellent.
I received an e-galley of Berkeley Noir from the publisher through Edelweiss
Berkeley Noir at Akashic Books
Akashic Noir series
Jerry Thompson author bio
Owen Hill author bio
https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2020/09/10/9781617757976/… (altro)
Segnalato
Tonstant.Weader | 14 altre recensioni | Sep 10, 2020 | Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
This is the sixth Noir collection by Aksahic Books that I have reviewed for Library Thing. They have been consistently good with a variety of stories. Berkeley Noir, covering a town I've never been to, continues the trend. I tend to read the stories out of order based on length, author, and how I'm feeling at the time. So I was a little worried when the first few that I read didn't leave a last marIk on me. Then I hit "Eat Your Pheasant, Drink Your Wine" by Shanthi Sekaran, which had such a unique twist for this series that I ultimately ended up on the positive side. "Wifebeater Tank Top" and "The Tangy Brine of Dark Night" were also highlights for me.… (altro)
Segnalato
smcgurr | 14 altre recensioni | Jul 29, 2020 | Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Eddie Muller Editor, Contributor
Robert T. Barrett Illustrator
Simon Winchester Introduction
Owen Hill Contributor
Jamie Dewolf Contributor
Dorothy Lazard Contributor
Kim Addonizio Contributor
Mahmud Rahman Contributor
Keenan Norris Contributor
Katie Gilmartin Contributor
Phil Canalin Contributor
Nick Petrulakis Contributor
Carolyn Alexander Contributor
Keri Miki-Lani Schroeder Contributor
Harry Louis Williams III Contributor
Nayomi Munaweera Contributor
Joe Loya Contributor
Tom McElravey Contributor
Judy Juanita Contributor
Lexi Pandell Contributor
Kimn Neilson Contributor
Michael David Lukas Contributor
Aya de León Contributor
Thomas Burchfield Contributor
Barry Gifford Contributor
Mara Faye Lethem Contributor
Shanthi Sekaran Contributor
Jason S. Ridler Contributor
Summer Brenner Contributor
Lucy Jane Bledsoe Contributor
Jim Nisbet Contributor
Nick Mamatas Contributor
Susan Dunlap Contributor
JM Curet Contributor
John Seigenthaler Foreword
Statistiche
- Opere
- 3
- Opere correlate
- 3
- Utenti
- 91
- Popolarità
- #204,136
- Voto
- 4.1
- Recensioni
- 28
- ISBN
- 36
- Lingue
- 1