ALL DUE RESPECT
Edited by Chris Rhatigan
I approach anthologies the way I approach the tables at a potluck dinner, wary but hopeful. I know that there will always be someone who brings a retro-ironic Jello salad made with lime gelatine and cottage cheese. (And I didn't like it when my grandmother made it.)
If I'm lucky, there will also be a bowl of my favorite white trash indulgence, Five-Cup Salad. (1 cup mandarin orange slices. 1 cut pineapple chunks. 1 cup minature marshmallows. 1 cup grated coconut. 1 cup sour cream. It's insanely good and full of vitamin C!)
And if I'm really lucky there will be a dish on the table that I've never tasted, a combination of flavors and textures hitherto unknown to me but delicious from the first bite.)
All Due Respect, the new anthology from Christopher Rhatigan's Full Dark City Press, is a groaning board of treats, from the wonderfully named "The Great Whydini" by David Cranmer to "A Drink Named Fred" by Tom Hoisington. (Seriously, who's not going to read those two stories first?) Everything is good here, not a green bean casserole in the lot.
This is an unthemed anthology but the common thread is crime--all kinds of crime and the criminals who commit them, some of them planners and some of them opportunists as in Patricia Abbott's 70s story "Wheels on the Bus."
Some of the stories are about the knife-edge between life and death, like Matthew C. Funk's "His Girl," and Erin Cole's visceral "7 Seconds," one of two stories that seem to have been written in the wake of Sandy Hook. (The other is "Ratchet" by Stephen D. Rogers, a story that just drips menace laced with surprise.)
There are first lines that grab you, like "By the time I got there, they'd already taken three of his fingers" ("Habeus Corpus" by Benedict J. Jones) and "Gilberto's mama was a whore--white chick with more tattoos than teeth, even before skin ink became fashionable." (Gary Clifton, "The Last Ambassador t6o Pushmata." The stories are stuffed full of lines you want to write down so you'll remember, or lines you wish you could forget because they're so good you wish you'd thought of them.
Some of the stories have twist endings, some are on a straight line to a bad place from the first paragraph. And the aforementioned stories by Cranmer and Hoisington? They do not disappoint. In fact, nothing here really disappoints except the lack of women writers. Out of 29 stories, only three were written by women. Ladies--I want to see a better showing next time!
At 175 pages, this anthology is just the right length to while away a Saturday morning if you have the time to gobble it up whole.
Showing posts with label Matthew C. Funk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matthew C. Funk. Show all posts
Saturday, February 9, 2013
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Nightfalls anthology
The Nightfalls anthology is in its final editing cycle and it's a terrific group of stories. The anthology will be priced at $3.99 (a bargain for 29 stories), with all proceeds going to Para Los Ninos, an organization that helps at-risk kids and their parents succeed in education and in life.
The cover design is by Joy Sillesen of Indie Author Services, who donated her work to the project, She will also be designing both the ebook and the print version. The stories range from speculative fiction to horror to humor with side trips to science fiction and noir-flavored lit fic.
Everybody I asked to participate in this anthology said yes, and then they gave me wonderful stories (and one poem). It's been a pleasure to work with everyone and I hope to do it again soon. More details to come, but just to whet your appetite--here's the TOC:
Acapulcolypse
Thomas Pluck
Some Say the
World Will End in Fire
Sidney Anne Harrison
Forward is
Where the Croissantwich Is
Chris Rhatigan
Somebody
Brave
Kat Laurange
Our Lady
Dale Phillips
Greene Day
Nigel Bird
Isabel
Megan McCord
The Memory
Keeper
Sandra Seamans
Bon Appétit
Barb Goffman
Déjà vu
Christopher Grant
It's Not the
End of the World
Matthew C. Funk
A Sound as
of Trumpets
Berkeley Hunt
Supper Time
Col Bury
Blackened
Dellani Oakes
The End of
Everything
AJ Hayes
Last Shift
Steven Luna
Into the
Night
Veronica Marie Lewis-Shaw
Blackout
Richard Godwin
Amidst
Encircling Gloom
Scott J Laurange
Devotee
G. Wells Taylor
Princess
Soda and the Bubblegum Knight
R. C. Barnes
The Last
Wave
Kaye George
The Dogs on
Main Street Howl
Allen Leverone
Call the Folks
Alex Keir
The Knitted
Gaol Born Sow Monkey
Peter Mark May
Crossfade
Christian Dabnor
The Tasting
Jesse James Freeman
The Annas
Patricia Abbott
Night Train
to Mundo Fine
Jimmy Callaway
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