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Barry Baldwin - Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. Vol. 52, No. 7 & 8, July/August 2007

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Barry Baldwin Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. Vol. 52, No. 7 & 8, July/August 2007
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    Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. Vol. 52, No. 7 & 8, July/August 2007
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Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. Vol. 52, No. 7 & 8, July/August 2007: summary, description and annotation

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Alfred Hitchcocks Mystery Magazine. Vol. 52, No. 7 & 8, July/August 2007

Editors Notes Details details by Linda Landrigan The devil as they say is - photo 1Editors Notes Details details by Linda Landrigan The devil as they say is - photo 2

Editors Notes: Details, details

by Linda Landrigan

The devil, as they say, is in the details.

Short stories depend on the effective employment of well-chosen details, the details that reveal a place, a character, or an era.

For ONeil De Noux, those details often concern the city of New Orleans, which he once again masterly evokes in his latest John Raven Beau story, Down on the Pontchartrain. His depiction of the city is all the more poignant in this story, which occurs B.K. before Hurricane Katrina wreaked its destruction. In the subsequent Conversation, Mr. De Noux talks a bit about his own connection to the Crescent City and the effect Katrina has had on his life.

Not all series are rooted in the same locale. Gilbert M. Stack selects just the right details to establish a new setting for each tale of his peripatetic trio: bare-knuckle boxer Corey Callaghan, his trainer Patrick osullivan, and the lady gambler Pandora Parson. In Pandoras Journey, the confines of a train make for a tight, tense crime drama.

Robert S. Levinson and Percy Spurlock Parker each place their characters in glamorous, deftly evoked locales, Hollywood and Vegas, respectively, and each shows us the more unsavory hazards of fame and fortune. In Mr. Levinsons A Prisoner of Memory, an aging movie star is convinced she is being stalked. In Mr. Parkers new Trevor Oaks story Death at My Door, the nave granddaughter of a late mobster is blackmailed.

Jas. R. Petrin has established a thoroughly realized setting in his fictional End of Main stories, where the towns retired police chief, Robideau, has now turned reluctant private eye. In The Palace Roxy, Robideau turns to the sundry and colorful characters of the Netley tavern to learn the secrets of a rundown movie theater.

Kristine Kathryn Rusch sets her latest tale on the beautiful Oregon coast, but what makes many of her stories distinctive is her attention to the details of her characters daily jobs. In Incident at Lonely Rocks, Oscar, in the course of doing his job, comes across a grisly crime scene.

L.A. Wilson, Jr., also expertly captures his characters in their daily lives, just at the moment when events conspire to upset the delicate harmony. German Johnson and the Lost Horizon takes place in post-World War II New York, where racism and evil have descended from the world stage to a small table in a restaurant in Harlem. The Post-War era may likewise be the setting for Barry Baldwins meditative tale, Untying the Knot, but it is very much a post-9/11 story as well.

Anyone whos ever tried to decipher an instruction manual will appreciate the telling details of Neil Schofields cautionary tale Murder: A Users Guibe. But if youre inclined to be an overly empathetic reader, well, youve been warned.

We welcome two new authors this month, Tim Maleeny and Melodie Campbell. Mr. Maleeny (The Weight), an advertising executive in San Franscico, is the author of the recently published novel Stealing the Dragon, from Midnight Ink. His second novel in that series, Beating the Babushka, comes out later this year. The author of School for Burglars, Melodie Campbell, of Oakville, Ontario, is a director of marketing by day, crime writer by night. Shes published numerous short stories and humor articles in Canada and the U.S. and also teaches humor and fiction writing at Sheridan College.

Down on the Pontchartrain

by ONeil De Noux

MONDAY 22 AUGUST 2005 The call comes over my portable police radio just as I - photo 3

MONDAY, 22 AUGUST 2005

The call comes over my portable police radio just as I step aboard Sad Lisa Headquarters calling for Homicide... a signal thirty... parking lot... West End Park. I cant help thinking this is what I get for trying to knock off early on my squads last night before we switch from the midnight shift.

Moving to the side of my houseboat, I look across the 17th Street Canal at West End Park. Dont see much beyond the low seawall except the rear of the elevated wooden restaurants and the tops of oak trees bathed in soft yellow streetlight. I glance at my watch on the way back to my unmarked Chevy parked on Orpheum Avenue alongside Sad Lisa. Its five A.M. exactly. I lock my briefcase in the trunk but only after taking out my notepad and ballpoint pen, tucking them into the pocket of my navy blue suit coat. The night air is still clammy, still hot from the days heat.

My sergeant calls me on the radio as I start across the new pedestrian bridge connecting Bucktown, where Sad Lisa is permanently moored, to Orleans Parish. I tell him Ill be at West End Park in two minutes. You see, its my turn. Im up for the next murder.

The new bridge is red brick with an iron railing painted dark green, about fifteen feet wide and maybe forty yards long, rising in the center to allow small boats from Lake Pontchartrain. A brisk breeze blows from the lake, and I watch waves slap against the rocky shoreline. Theyre not rocks, actually, but large concrete blocks lying at odd angles, keeping the lake from eating away the land. I lick the salty mist from my lips. A large orange cat perched on the bridge railing near the base of the bridge glares at me with yellow eyes as I pass.

Cant miss the crime scene. Two New Orleans police cars, red and blue lights flashing, headlights illuminating figures standing next to a large live oak and a figure on the ground. Three other police cars are also there, Levee Board cops and a Jefferson Parish Sheriffs unit, drawn to the crime scene like bugs to a lightbulb.

Stepping up, I recognize the big cop just as he turns his flashlight my way and announces, Well, its Sioux time, ladies and gents!

I shake my head as I move through the assembled officers.

Sidney Tilghman, a sergeant now, continues my introduction. This heres Homicide Detective John Raven Beau whose daddy hailed from the swamps of Vermilion Bay and his mama from the Dakotas. Dont remember which one. Tilghman sidles next to me as I ease to the right to let the dim streetlight illuminate the body. How you been, old buddy? he asks. See youre still skinny. Tilghman has put on a few pounds, more than a few in a couple years. Were both thirty, but he looks more than a couple years older, with a hint of gray in his curly hair.

We were on the same platoon back in the Second District, the uptown police, both patrolmen before he made sergeant and I moved to the land of murder, suicide, and other negligent homicides. I shrug and turn to the other officer, a tall, thin woman with coal black skin, large brown eyes, and hair parted in cornrows. Her nameplate reads S. PANOLA.

At six two, Im a good four inches taller than Officer Panola. I nod toward the body and ask her, Shine your light on it, okay?

She nods and focuses her bright flashlight on the dead woman lying on her side beneath an oak at the edge of the parking lot. The victims skin glows pallid white. Over the radio, I hear a crime lab tech is en route, as well as another homicide detective.

I list the victims vital stats in my notes: white female, about thirty, tallish, maybe five ten, thin build, light brown hair styled short, brown eyes, tattoo of pearls around her neck, tattoo of a heart on left forearm. Body pierced with four earring holes in each ear. I describe the silver- and gold-colored earrings as well as the stainless steel rod piercing the right side of her nose. Clothing: green tie-dyed blouse ripped in front, long tan skirt, brown sandals.

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