The Best American Mystery Stories 2011

The Best American Mystery Stories 2011

by HarlanCoben (Editor), OttoPenzler (Editor)

$23.61

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20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 432
Publisher: Mariner Books
Published: 04 Oct 2011

ISBN 10: 054755396X
ISBN 13: 9780547553962

Media Reviews
The excellent 15th edition of this best of series, edited by myster maven Otto Penzler, contains 20 winning short stories, many by relative unknowns. Among the standouts are Brendan DuBois's Ride-Along, in which a veteran cop and a freelance reporter get involved in a robbery, and Beth Ann Fennelly and Tom Franklin's What His Hands Had Been Waiting For, in which the struggle for survival in the Mississippi Delta during the terrible 1927 flood takes a strange turn. In Ed Gorman's memorable Flying Solo, two old men dying of cancer make the most of their last days. As in previous volumes, it's hard to find lighter fare, but S.J. Rozan's clever Chin Yong-Yun Takes a Case is a beautifully crafted and satisfying tale of amateur detection. Other contributors include such pros as Lawrence Block, Loren D. Estleman, and Mickey Spillane and Max Collins. --STARRED Publishers Weekly Ranging from homespun to lush and tropical, this year's crop of 20 stories offers a variety of tastes and textures.But exotic doesn't always mean compelling. Charles McCarry's The End of the String, set in Africa, lumbers like an elephant toward a conclusion as momentous as a mouse. Diamond Alley, Dennis McFadden's quiet tale of small-town teens confronting the murder of a popular classmate, packs a far greater punch. Family stories are equally powerful. In Christopher Merkner's chilling Last Cottage, a young couple tries to outlast a neighbor determined to oust them from their waterfront home. Across cultures, mothers protect. In Richard Lange's Baby Killer, Blanca struggles with an acting-out granddaughter. And although embarrassed by her profession, a Chinese mother helps her detective daughter in S.J. Rozan's Chin Yong-Yun Takes a Case. An absentee father's return challenges a wife who's moved on in Joe R. Lansdale's The Stars Are Falling. But Chris F. Holm shows in The Hitter that sometimes the greatest threat is to the dads themselves. Families don't always grow through birth or marriage, as Beth Ann Fennelly and Tom Franklin reveal in What His Hands Had Been Waiting For. And of course, some families are just plain toxic, as Lawrence Block's Clean Slate and Loren D. Estleman's Sometimes a Hyena aptly demonstrate. But nasty behavior isn't just a family affair. Eric Barnes shows teenagers wreaking havoc for no particular reason in his slow-moving Something Pretty, Something Beautiful. And in A Long Time Dead, Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins show that evil can turn up where it's least expected. It has its highs and lows, but the best of Coben's Best is really first-rate. --Kirkus