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Baltimore NoirEdited by Laura Lippman Mystery | Trade Paperback Original Mystery queenpin Lippman and cohorts dissect their city with a vengeance Brand new crime fiction stories from David Simon, Laura Lippman, Tim Cockey, Rob Hiaasen, Robert Ward, Sujata Massey, Jack Bludis, Rafael Alvarez, Marcia Talley, Joseph Wallace, Lisa Respers France, Charlie Stella, Sarah Weinman, Dan Fesperman, Jim Fusilli, and Ben Neihart. Click here to see more titles in the Akashic Noir Series. Click here to see 2006 events for Baltimore Noir Click here to read an excerpt from Baltimore NoirSee below for full table of contents From the introduction by Laura Lippman: To live in Baltimore--Bulletmore, Murderland, according to one famous piece of graffiti--is to be aware of killing; we have not enjoyed the sharp declines in homicide rates achieved by cities such as Boston and New York. We remain steadfastly in the top five, per capita, year in and year out. Statistically, two people died while I was working on this foreword . . . Baltimore also has an odd geographic distinction. It is one of only two major U.S. cities that lies in no county. (St. Louis is the other.) Landlocked on every side but one, which is water, it cannot expand or annex. Squeezed this way, it is a perfect setting for noir, which depends on an almost Darwinian desperation among its players. Laura Lippman has lived in Baltimore most of her life, and she would have spent even more time there if the editors of the Sun had agreed to hire her earlier. She attended public schools and has lived in several of the city's distinctive neighborhoods, including Dickeyville, Tuscany-Canterbury, Evergreen, and South Federal Hill. Table of Contents IntroductionPart I: The Way Things Used To Be "Easy As A-B-C" by Laura Lippman (Locust Point) "Fat Chance" by Robert Ward (Old Northwood) "Pigtown Will Shine Tonight" by Jack Bludis (Pigtown) "Over My Dead Body" by Rob Hiaasen (Fell's Point) "The Invisible Man" by Rafael Alvarez (Highlandtown) Part II: The Way Things Are "Stainless Steel" by David Simon (Sandtown-Winchester) "Home Movies" by Marcia Talley (Little Italy) "Liminal" by Joseph Wallace (Security Boulevard-Woodlawn) "Almost Missed It By a Hair" by Lisa Respers (France Howard Park) "Ode to the O's" by Charlie Stella (Memorial Stadium) "Donšt Walk in Front of Me" by Sarah Weinman (Pikesville) Part III: The Way Things Never Were "As Seen on TV" by Dan Fesperman (Fells Point) "The Haunting of Slink Ridgely" by Tim Cockey (Greenspring Valley) "The Homecoming" by Jim Fusilli (Camden Yards) "Frog Cycle" by Ben Neihart (Inner Harbor) "Goodwood Gardens" by Sujata Massey (Roland Park) |