| The Stark House Anthology edited
  by Rick Ollerman Stark
  House, 2024 The Stark House Anthology,
  edited by Rick Ollerman and Gregory Shepard, celebrates Stark House Press’s silver
  jubilee. And oh boy is it a worthy gift to readers! Its 30 stories, all from
  authors previously published by Stark House except for Gregory Shepard—but he’s
  the publisher so some leeway is easily given here—are exceptional.  The most interesting work is Jada
  M. Davis’s not-quite-noir “So Curse the Day” because it is a previously unpublished
  novel with a Gold Medal vibe, a rotten protagonist hitting a new town with
  big dreams—dreams the reader knows from the first page will fall to ruin. All
  because no matter the breaks Dun Lattner gets, a kind and generous old
  landlady, a beautiful girlfriend, a good job, a business of his own, he will make
  the wrong choices and mess everything up. Every time…but the book’s ending
  makes “So Curse the Day” a little different than the general noir fare. It works,
  too, and it is worth the entry fee all by itself. Charles Runyon’s “Hangover” is
  a dark and disturbing look at marital misery, cheating spouses, alcohol, and bad
  behavior. “Art for Money’s Sake,” by Dan J. Marlowe, is a clever and
  surprising tale about art forgery—with a forger too smart for his own good. Sleaze
  king Orrie Hitt’s “Nothing in My Way,” is a tricky and surprising riff on the
  old fake-my-death-for-the-insurance gag. The climactic twist, dripping with irony,
  made me smile because, in a phrase, it was perfect. “Angie,” by Ed Gorman—another story
  loaded with irony—is a literate and dark tale about a woman dreaming of a
  sugar daddy, but somewhere along the way she hooked-up with a sleazy and poor
  bank robber named Roy. Worse, Roy talked her into having his named tattooed
  on her perfect breasts. And wow does it end with a beautiful surprise. Fredric
  Brown’s short and wicked “Beware the Dog,” is an ironic cautionary tale about
  murder and making friends. “Hit Me”—by the co-editor of the anthology, Rick
  Ollerman—is a pitch-perfect murder-for-hire story told from the perspective
  of a greedy husband. The climactic twist is smile-inducing and just right. “Axe,” by the other co-editor
  and owner of Stark House, Gregory Shepard, is a smart and troubling tale
  about a guy with a legal problem. The narrator is unreliable, but by the end
  it is clear to everyone, including the reader, what happened. There are other
  excellent stories by Wade Miller, Lionel White, Stephen Marlowe—a Chester Drum
  tale no less—Frank Kane, Harry Whittington, Day Keene, Helen Nielsen, Bill
  Pronzini, Fredric Brown, Robert Silverberg, Bruno Fischer and many, many
  others. The Stark House Anthology is as
  close to a perfect hardboiled story collection as I have read. Every tale is
  a smash, every writer is worth reading. My only gripe: its 30 stories and 458
  pages just whetted my appetite. I want more.  | 
| Click
  here to purchase the Kindle edition or here for the paperback
  at Amazon. Click here to purchase this book at Stark House’s website—to celebrate its 25th anniversary, every book at Stark House’s website is 25% off during the month of June. | 
 

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment