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Sto caricando le informazioni... Berkeley Noirdi Jerry Thompson (A cura di)
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. 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.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! 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/ 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. Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing. As the Introduction to this recent collection from Akashic Books' noir series notes: “Can a Bay Area college town be a breeding ground for noir? On the surface the alleys don’t seem that dark, until we look a little closer.” Fans of noir recognize what the 16 tales in this book make plain: Shadows and darkness that mark the genre are not found in the alleys or the wharfs, or in city streets and the dusky hills they give way to. Shadows and darkness live in the heart and mind—even our own (if we are brave enough to admit it).In these stories, dark impulses—what Poe called “the imp of the perverse,” are like rafts carried on dark currents. Among the not-quite-human tech moguls, free range environmentalists, left-behind revolutionaries, and bitcoin barkers, rises the tide of recognize-you-anywhere dark hearted, ill-fated losers that cast their shadows on it all. Many of the people in these stories are seekers. But rather than enlightenment or venture capital, they seek the expected—a home, love, somewhere to belong, escape. And because it’s noir we’re dealing with, we know the only way to those things is to get out, and the only way out is down. As in the best noir tales, there is redemption here. The secret promise of an ocean burial, the hollow histories of idolized personalities, the double-cross that is its own hopeless reward. The stories, each by a different author, mix easily, with haunted academe and black night sailing taking up residence among fables and the hapless inevitability of surrender. Berkeley Noir is a strong addition to Akashic’s catalogue. Strong not only because of its faith in the noir genre, but because of the way its stories uncover the wanting in the land of plenty. Hollywood and Los Angeles have their rich veins of noir familiar to many readers. Now the Bay Area claims its own. Peter Scisco nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
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"My mom went to Berkeley in the 60s (my main tangential claim to hippiedom), so I'm psyched to see her favorite town get the Akashic noir treatment. San Francisco's hippie silo has long captured the imagination of artists and writers, and I can't wait to read the many stories in this collection, including new works from cult faves such Barry Gifford, Aya de Leon, Summer Brenner, and more." --CrimeReads, included in CrimeReads' Most Anticipated Crime Books of 2020 "This volume proves yet again that noir is discoverable anywhere there are human beings--in this case, a quirky university town on the east side of San Francisco Bay...Another fine entry in a series for the ages." --New York Journal of Books "Each story evokes the dark side of a Berkeley neighborhood and pays tribute both to the city's history as a haven for outcasts and as a literary metropolis. If you race through it, consider picking up San Francisco Noir and Oakland Noir." --Diablo Magazine, a Top Ticket choice "Berkeley, California: home of a world-class university with a parking lot for Nobel laureates, politically active and correct, volatile, and, yes, a bit seedy, too, if you know where to look. The stories in Akashic's latest noir anthology expose the underbelly of this lovely city...All get their just rewards eventually, and readers will be entertained as they find out how it happens." --Booklist "Readers will be glad that many of these tales are fun in a way that traditional noir isn't." --Publishers Weekly "Sixteen new stories reveal the darker side of friendly, funky Berkeley." --Kirkus Reviews Akashic Books continues its award-winning series of original noir anthologies, launched in 2004 with Brooklyn Noir. Each book comprises all new stories, each one set in a distinct neighborhood or location within the respective city. Brand-new stories by: Barry Gifford, Jim Nisbet, Lexi Pandell, Lucy Jane Bledsoe, Mara Faye Lethem, Thomas Burchfield, Shanthi Sekaran, Nick Mamatas, Kimn Neilson, Jason S. Ridler, Susan Dunlap, J.M. Curet, Summer Brenner, Michael David Lukas, Aya de León, and Owen Hill. From the introduction: A town named after a British philosopher doesn't exactly evoke visions of Goodis or Highsmith. Grifters? Dames? Cops? In Berkeley? On the surface the alleys don't seem that dark, until we look a little closer. Possibly the most iconic visual image of Berkeley does involve cops. It's the film with Mario Savio, atop a police car, declaring, "There's a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can't take part!" Now there's a statement that sums up the spirit of noir. Berkeley Noir asks, If not here, where? When pulling together this outstanding list of authors, we were constantly reminded of Berkeley's rich literary history, one that swerves through varying shades of noir. Those who helped pave the way for this collection include Anthony Boucher, Janet Dawson, Margaret Cuthbert, Ellen Gilchrist, Linda Grant, Jonathan Lethem, and Barry Gifford. There will always be a place in the heart of this city where even outcasts can feel at home...The search through darkness for an authentic, eclectic voice is the most important ingredient in the rich stew that is Berkeley, California. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
Già recensito in anteprima su LibraryThingIl libro di Jerry Thompson Berkeley Noir è stato disponibile in LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Discussioni correntiNessunoCopertine popolari
Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)813.08720806Literature English (North America) American fiction By type Genre fiction Adventure fiction Mystery fictionClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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