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Write a ReviewMystery queenpin Lippman and cohorts dissect their city with a vengeance.
Brand New Stories by: David Simon, Laura Lippman, Tim Cockey, Rob Hiaasen, Robert Ward, Sujata Massey, Jack Bludis, Rafael Alvarez, Marcia Talley, Joseph Wallace, Lisa Respers France, Charlie Stella, Sarah Weinman, Dan Fesperman, Jim Fusilli, and Ben Neihart.
Mystery fans should relish this taste of Baltimore's seamier side, the eighth volume in Akashic's series showcasing dark tales of crime and place (Brooklyn Noir, etc.). Editor Lippman offers both a fine introduction and the lead story ("Easy as A-B-C"), which is one of the anthology's best. Half of the 16 contributors have connections to the Baltimore Sun, including David Simon of Homicide fame, whose "Stainless Steel" is a noir gem. Baltimore (aka "Bulletmore, Murderland") is a diverse city, and the stories reflect everything from its old row houses and suburban mansions to its beloved Orioles and harbor areas. There's dark humor in Dan Fesperman's "As Seen on TV," as well as in Tim Cockey's noir ghost story, "The Haunting of Slink Ridgely." Charlie Stella's mob story, "Ode to the O's," is brutally direct, while Ben Neihart's "Frog Cycle" offers a futuristic take on the high-tech industries springing up in place of factories. Other contributors include Marcia Talley, Jim Fusilli and Sujata Massey. (May) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsWell known for her popular series of mysteries starring the fearless Tess Monoghan, Laura Lippman has won every major mystery award, from the Anthony to the Agatha.
More About the Author
Name:
Laura Lippman
Current Home:
Baltimore, Maryland
Date of Birth:
January 31, 1959
Place of Birth:
Atlanta, Georgia
Education:
B.S., Medill School of Journalism, Northwestern University, 1981
Awards:
Edgar and Shamus awards for Charm City, 1997; Agatha and Anthony awards for Butchers Hill, 1998; Anthony and Shamus awards for Big Trouble, 1999
Laura Lippman was a reporter for 20 years, including 12 years at The (Baltimore) Sun. She began writing novels while working fulltime and published seven books about "accidental PI" Tess Monaghan before leaving daily journalism in 2001. Her work has been awarded the Edgar ®, the Anthony, the Agatha, the Shamus, the Nero Wolfe, Gumshoe, and Barry awards. She also has been nominated for other prizes in the crime fiction field, including the Hammett and the Macavity. She was the first-ever recipient of the Mayor's Prize for Literary Excellence and the first genre writer recognized as Author of the Year by the Maryland Library Association.
Ms. Lippman grew up in Baltimore and attended city schools through ninth grade. After graduating from Wilde Lake High School in Columbia, Md., Ms. Lippman attended Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. Her other newspaper jobs included the Waco Tribune-Herald and the San Antonio Light.
Ms. Lippman returned to Baltimore in 1989 and has lived there since.
Biography from author's website.
In our interview, Lippman shared some fun and fascinating facts about herself:
"I can do an imitation of Ethel Merman singing ‘Satisfaction.'"
"I'm not a Baltimore native -- I arrived here about six years too late for that. But I love the fact that I've convinced the world that I am."
"Like my character, Tess Monaghan, I used to row. Unlike her, I was very, very bad at it."
"I've written eight books in my series -- one not yet published -- and a stand-alone crime novel, but my subject is always, on some level, Baltimore.
It's a problem-place, neither northern nor southern, somewhat addicted to nostalgia, yet amnesiac about the more dicey parts of its past. I used an epigraph from H. L. Mencken in one of my books: ‘A Baltimorean is not merely John Doe, an isolated individual of Homo sapiens, like every other John Doe. He is a John Doe of a certain place -- of Baltimore, of a definite home in Baltimore.' I am a person of a certain place, and that place happens to be Baltimore."
What was the book that most influenced your life or your career as a writer -- and why?
It wasn't so much a book as a single line in a book -- the last line of Eudora Welty's One Writer's Beginnings. She writes: "A sheltered life can be a daring life as well. For all serious daring starts from within."
I, too, had led a fairly sheltered life at the time I read this. But Welty's words persuaded me that this was an obstacle that could be overcome; if I worked hard to develop my empathy and curiosity, then no world, no topic would be off-limits to me. Yes, writers should write what they know about --but knowledge need not end with autobiography. All I had to do was venture out into the world and see things. My newspaper career provided just the window on the world I needed.
Welty, by the way, worked as a photographer as part of a WPA project in the 1930s. That's not mentioned in her memoir, but the detail seems relevant to me.
What are your ten favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
What are some of your favorite films, and what makes them unforgettable to you?
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
I listen to practically everything -- jazz (primarily the great vocalists doing standards), traditional country and bluegrass, the usual suspects in rock and roll, opera, and show tunes. I don't listen to music when I write because it would be wasted: when I'm working hard, I don't hear anything, even construction on the street outside.
If you had a book club, what would it be reading -- and why?
One of the great books that I haven't tackled -- Ulysses comes to mind -- or history, perhaps Toynbee. The gaps in my knowledge are alarming.
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
Books that are meaningful to the giver.
Do you have any special writing rituals? For example, what do you have on your desk when you're writing?
My desk includes a Colts mini-helmet signed by Johnny Unitas, a Brooks Robinson baseball card and a small army of "Strong Women" -- a phalanx of Pez containers led by Wonder Woman, whose entourage also includes a Roberto Clemente bobblehead and a pair of wind-up sumo wrestlers purchased in the company of one of my oldest and best friends 20 years ago. There are also objects that would be familiar to careful readers of the Tess Monaghan series, most notably an old blue-glass Planters peanut container, which I used for receipts.
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
I've been at this about a decade and I think I've been lucky for the most part. The toughest thing for me was finding an agent, a search that took almost a year. My book had already been accepted by the time the rejections started rolling in, so I could philosophical about those.
What tips or advice do you have for writers still looking to be discovered?
To focus their energies on writing, as opposed to publishing. In fact, it helps if you can split your consciousness, use two different parts of your brain, because the two things don't overlap as much as you might think. The writer part of you must never think about what is trendy, or what might sell, or what might hit the zeitgeist bulls-eye. You really shouldn't even think about what readers want, except within the context of the story you've created. If you're going to write in a genre, you can't cheat the genre, or disdain it. Readers may not know what your precise goal is in writing a book, but they'll know if you cheat.
You're building something complicated and, one hopes, even beautiful. Outside voices, outside agendas, make that task impossible. You're not writing to emulate some other writers' material success or lifestyle. You're writing in hopes of stirring in someone else what you felt when you read a seminal book.
Mystery queenpin Lippman and cohorts dissect their city with a vengeance.
Brand New Stories by: David Simon, Laura Lippman, Tim Cockey, Rob Hiaasen, Robert Ward, Sujata Massey, Jack Bludis, Rafael Alvarez, Marcia Talley, Joseph Wallace, Lisa Respers France, Charlie Stella, Sarah Weinman, Dan Fesperman, Jim Fusilli, and Ben Neihart.
Mystery fans should relish this taste of Baltimore's seamier side, the eighth volume in Akashic's series showcasing dark tales of crime and place (Brooklyn Noir, etc.). Editor Lippman offers both a fine introduction and the lead story ("Easy as A-B-C"), which is one of the anthology's best. Half of the 16 contributors have connections to the Baltimore Sun, including David Simon of Homicide fame, whose "Stainless Steel" is a noir gem. Baltimore (aka "Bulletmore, Murderland") is a diverse city, and the stories reflect everything from its old row houses and suburban mansions to its beloved Orioles and harbor areas. There's dark humor in Dan Fesperman's "As Seen on TV," as well as in Tim Cockey's noir ghost story, "The Haunting of Slink Ridgely." Charlie Stella's mob story, "Ode to the O's," is brutally direct, while Ben Neihart's "Frog Cycle" offers a futuristic take on the high-tech industries springing up in place of factories. Other contributors include Marcia Talley, Jim Fusilli and Sujata Massey. (May) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
Launched in 2004 with Brooklyn Noir, Akashic's series of regional noir anthologies continues with these welcome eighth and ninth entries. Who better to edit the volume dedicated to Baltimore than Lippman, a former Baltimore Sun reporter whose popular Tess Monaghan series is set in Charm City (also known as "Bulletmore" for its steadfastly high homicide rate)? Lippman also contributes the first and one of the best of the 16 original stories, "Easy as A-B-C," about a contractor who puts his building skills to use when his affair with his client ends. Charlie Stella's on-target dialog spotlights mob efficiency in "Ode to the O's.", while the Fell's Point area is the locale for two tales: Rob Hiassen's "Over My Dead Body," which revolves around the area's gentrification, and Dan Fesperman's "As Seen on TV," in which a Balkan hit man doesn't know that his favorite show, Homicide, which was set here, has long since been cancelled. Other writers include Marcia Talley, Sujata Massey, Tim Cockey, Jim Fusilli, and Homicide author David Simon. Once known as the Saintly City, St. Paul, MN, sheltered criminals on the run during the 1920s and 1930s, and in the mid-1990s Minneapolis was tagged as "Murderapolis" for a rash of killings one summer. So these wholesome Midwestern metropolises have their underside, as several good authors-Pete Hautman, K.J. Erickson, Larry Millett, David Housewright, William Kent Krueger, and Mary Logue-reveal in this collection. A famous writer finds a satisfying means of dealing with the hijacking of her web domain name in Judith Guest's captivating "Eminent Domain," and in Ellen Hart's suspenseful "Blind Sided," a man who's losing his sight comments "You can't go blind in Minnesota without being offered a lot of help-it's the way Minnesotans are." That may explain why these 15 original stories-some dealing with organized crime and less-than-peaceful death-are overall less dark than in the other anthologies reviewed here. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
| Easy as A-B-C | 17 | |
| Fat chance | 29 | |
| Pigtown will shine tonight | 51 | |
| Over my dead body | 71 | |
| The invisible man | 85 | |
| Stainless steel | 103 | |
| Home movies | 119 | |
| Liminal | 130 | |
| Almost missed it by a hair | 156 | |
| Ode to the O's | 176 | |
| Don't walk in front of me | 194 | |
| As seen on TV | 213 | |
| The haunting of Slink Ridgely | 229 | |
| The homecoming | 244 | |
| Frog cycle | 255 | |
| Goodwood Gardens | 263 |
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