Mississippi Noir

Mississippi Noir

Unabridged — 8 hours, 49 minutes

Mississippi Noir

Mississippi Noir

Unabridged — 8 hours, 49 minutes

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Overview

In Mississippi Noir, literary crime fiction master Tom Franklin has assembled a phenomenal short-story collection that highlights a mesmerizing and diverse set of styles and subject matter. Urban, suburban, and rural settings alike unveil new shades of darkness that fall upon Mississippi's past and present.

Mississippi Noir features brand-new stories by Ace Atkins, William Boyle, Megan Abbott, Jack Pendarvis, Dominiqua Dickey, Michael Kardos, Jamie Paige, Jimmy Cajoleas, Chris Offutt, Michael Farris Smith, Andrew Paul, Lee Durkee, Robert Busby, John M. Floyd, RaShell R. Smith-Spears, and Mary Miller.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

06/13/2016
Mississippi, as Franklin notes in his introduction, has the most corrupt government, the highest rate of various preventable ills, and the highest poverty rate in the country. In short, the state is a natural backdrop for noir fiction. The 16 stories in this uneven Akashic anthology emerge from a cauldron of sex, race, ignorance, poverty, bigotry, misunderstanding, and sheer misfortune, though few of them take advantage of the possibilities of such a mix. Most tales are variants on the theme of two people having sex and then something bad happening to one or both of them—which is a limited exploration of this fairly complex genre, dealing as it does with the spectrum of human nature’s dark side. Still, readers will enjoy those entries that do stand out for their originality: Mary Miller’s “Uphill,” about a man’s effort to take a picture; Jimmy Cajoleas’s “Lord of Madison County,” which follows a drug deal gone strange; and Andrew Paul’s tale of innocent evil, “Moonface.” (Aug.)

Associated Press

"In these stories, from Biloxi to Hattiesburg, from Jackson to Oxford, the various crimes of the heart or doomed deeds of fractured households are carried out in real Mississippi locales . . . [A] devilishly wrought introduction to writers with a feel for Mississippi who are pursuing lonely, haunting paths of the imagination."

New York Daily News

"Maybe it’s the oppressive heat and humidity, or maybe it’s the high rates of poverty, crime and corruption that plague this southern state. Whatever the reason, Mississippi is the perfect setting for a good noir story . . . [The Noir series] is adept at finding the dark underbelly of cities big and small, but it has produced a unique, delicious flavor of noir fiction with this Mississippi installment."

Sun Herald

"But in Mississippi, darkness falls on both sides of the tracks. And that’s what makes this particular anthology, one of many ‘Noirs’ published by Akashic Books, so unnerving. These could be your neighbors."

From the Publisher

"With the most corrupt government, the highest rate of preventable diseases, and the highest poverty rate in the country, Mississippi is a natural fit for Akashic's noir anthology series."
Publishers Weekly, Fall 2016 Announcements

Long-listed for The Morning News 2017 Tournament of Books

"Mississippi boasts a notably corrupt state government and the highest rate of poverty in the country. No wonder, then, that area writers have found some pretty nasty stories to tell, several of which are included here: stories about a girl who murders her mother’s live-in boyfriend; a drug dealer who goes to extreme lengths to repay his source; a jilted lover who kills her exlover’s wife; college students who are having their fingers removed. And, of course, stories about sex and rage and white trash. Some of the 16 contributors are appearing in print for the first time, and some big names—Megan Abbott and Ace Atkins, for example—offer fine stories."
Booklist

"The prose reflects the striking, albeit morbid, writing that has been associated with Southern fiction since Faulkner dreamed up Yoknapatawpha County...This collection provides readers with well-crafted, dark stories of Mississippi mistakes and misdeeds that are told in such a way that allow for each individual contributor's voice to shine through...The latest addition to dark Mississippi fiction is not one to be missed.
Oxford Citizen

"But in Mississippi, darkness falls on both sides of the tracks. And that’s what makes this particular anthology, one of many “Noirs” published by Akashic Books, so unnerving. These could be your neighbors."
Sun Herald

"Ace Atkins. Michael Farris Smith. Megan Abbott. Jack Pendarvis. Mary Miller. William Boyle. All your favorite writers are there in the latest noir anthology from Akashic Books, many of them presenting brand-new stories. Each story is set in a distinct neighborhood or location of Mississippi, and among the 16 pieces you’ll find seasoned noir writers but also first-time published authors. Book editor Tom Franklin writes in the introduction: This isn't, and hasn't ever been, a land purely of moonlight and magnolias. Because in that moonlight, terrible things happen."
Deep South Magazine

"Mississippi as a state is a fount of great literature . . . It is also a state rich in the mystery genre with settings perfect for suspense. It’s not wonder, then, that this anthology is a standout in an excellent series."
Tonstant Weader Reviews

"Some of my favorite writers have woven their webs between these covers. So kick back, pour yourself a drink, and find out why Mississippi Noir may be the darkest of them all."
Greg Iles, author of The Bone Tree

"All these stories drag you in and don't let go until the last sentence...i highly recommend this book."
Dew on the Kudzu

SEPTEMBER 2016 - AudioFile

Sixteen stories show off their Mississippi settings and both writers’ and narrators' capacities to deliver the hallmark of American noir: the cold- blooded character’s devastating effect on others. The Mississippi authors include Jimmy Cajoleas, Mary Miller, Chris Offutt, and RaShell R. Smith-Spears, each offering the perfect blend of the ordinary and the creepy. The narrators also turn in performances that enhance the characters and plots. Some stories are performed by just one narrator, always well chosen for the particular tale, while others feature a pair of narrators working together to ramp-up the rising tide of foreboding. Accents, pacing, and tonal variations are strikingly authentic and varied to make each story a fully voiced—and fully captivating—experience. F.M.R.G. © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2016-05-16
The big city has no lock on misery in these 16 portraits of dark doings in the Deep South. Some people's expectations are just plain unrealistic. Like Glen, who wants her boyfriend to stop chucking cinder blocks off the overpass in Jamie Paige's "Boys and Girl Games Like Coupling." Or Erin, who thinks she can get her ex-husband to round up her self-destructive father for transplant surgery in Robert Busby's "Anglers of the Keep." Or Cissy, who hopes her baby's daddy will stop kidnapping the child in Dominiqua Dickey's "God's Gonna Trouble the Water." Or Betsy, who keeps grudges forever in Chris Offutt's "Cheap Suitcase and a New Town." In Mary Miller's "Uphill," the unnamed heroine knows her life won't change but thinks it isn't really her life anyway. Even sadder may be the folks who do try to change their lives, like William Boyle's hero in "Most Things Haven't Worked Out" or the petty drug dealer in Jimmy Cajoleas's "Lord of Madison County." There's the usual crew who suffer for love, like Jada in RaShell R. Smith-Spears's "Losing her Religion" or the eponymous "Oxford Girl" in Megan Abbott's grim, predictable tale. There are misfits like mute Hero in Michael Farris Smith's "Hero" and Yizhak Cohen in Andrew Paul's "Moonface." And every now and again, there's a lucky soul who does manage to triumph over the trouble she gets herself into, like Anna in John M. Floyd's "Pit Stop." On the whole, this latest entry in the long-running Akashic Noir series presents tale after tale of people who can't get out of their own ways.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169607031
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 08/02/2016
Edition description: Unabridged
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