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115 pages $9.00 (paper) ISBN
0-932511-55-4
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New Noir
In New Noir, John Shirley,
like a postmodern Edgar Allan Poe, depicts minds deformed into
fantastic configurations by the pressure, the very weight, of an
entire society bearing down on them. "Jodie and Annie on TV,"
selected by the editor of Mystery Scene as "perhaps the most
important story… in years in the crime of fiction genre," reflects
the fact that whole segments of zeitgeist and personal psychology
have been supplanted by the mass media, that the average kid on the
streets in Los Angeles is in a radical crisis of exploded
self-image, and that life really is meaningless for millions. In "I
Want to Get Married, Says the World's Smallest Man," a crack
prostitute's state of mind degenerates so far as to become entirely
mechanical. These stories also bring to mind Elmore Leonard and the
better crime novelists, but John Shirley - unlike writers who
attempt to extrapolate from peripheral observation and research -
bases his stories on his personal experience of extreme people and
extreme mental states, and on his struggle with the seductions of
drugs, crime, prostitution, and
violence. |