Cream of the Crop: Best Mystery & Suspense Stories by Bill
Pronzini Stark
House, 2024 Cream of the Crop: Best Mystery & Suspense
Stories of Bill Pronzini is the story collection I’ve been waiting
for—without realizing it until now. Included are 26 of Pronzini’s best
stories, selected by the author himself (and who am to argue?), originally published
in magazines like Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock Mystery
Magazine, The Strand Magazine, and New Black Mask between 1967 and
2023. Which is to say, these tales are representative of Pronzini’s entire criminous
career from his Nameless Detective, featured in 10 of the stories, his
standalone work, which total 15, and a solitary tale in the Quincannon &
Carpenter historical private eye series. My usual reading modus operandi is a
preference for standalone tales—shorts, novels, and everything in between—and
this collection is no different. The standalones are my favorites. A good example
is “Opportunity”—which is the earliest tale in the collection from 1967—about
an honest cop facing an expensive medical treatment and a moral dilemma when a
chance to siphon more off the streets than his salary arises. “Proof of Guilt,”
published in 1973, is a nifty variation on an impossible crime that left me
with a smile. “Smuggler’s Island”—published in 1977—is one of my favorite stories
because it beautifully intertwines a past crime with a present crime. There
is an uninhabited island and a murder, too. “Liar’s Dice,” from 1992, is a brilliantly
conceived psychological thriller with a dark bent about a dice game and deciphering
truth from lies. And those are only a few of the standouts! Now for the Nameless tales, and despite my
preference for standalones, each of these is a gem of serial private
detection. You see, I really do like Nameless a bunch because Pronzini has an
ability to keep the character fresh with intriguing plots and expanding
characterization. “Thin Air,” which was published in 1979, is a great old
school detective story about a scorned wife, a thief, and a cheating
husband. A murder happens, too, and while it is close to an impossible
murder, Nameless takes care of it with pulpy pizazz. “Incident in a
Neighborhood Tavern,” from 1988, is a little different because the crime—a tavern
is held up—happens while Nameless is drinking a beer and chatting with the friendly
barkeep. But that’s only the start and it ends somewhere else entirely. “Stakeout”
finds Nameless doing a skip-trace on a deadbeat dad that turns into a waiting
game that goes sideways and takes all of Nameless’ deductive prowess to find
the truth. And the rest are just as good. Cream of the Crop is a
marvelous collection you’ll want to rush through, but it is best read slowly to better experience its savory taste. Afterall,
it took Bill Pronzini parts of seven decades to write these stories and just
because they finally arrived in a single package is no reason to gorge
yourself, no matter how much you’d like to. Get it. Read it. You’ll like it, I promise. |
Go here for the
Kindle version and here for the paperback edition at Amazon. |
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