Atlanta, the Deep South, in 1948. The war changed a lot of things, but the immediate postwar world, in the U.S., was in many ways a turning back of the clock. Women in the workplace, like black guys in uniform, were wartime adjustments. The unions had been bottled up, part of the war effort, and there was no reason to let a bunch of Jews and Reds wave the Hammer-and-Sickle. Jim Crow was both custom and law, and things were gonna be the way they were before, when people knew their place. And if they forgot themselves, there were the night-riders, the Klan. Not that good people subscribe to violence, but when every Christian value is threatened with contamination, where can you turn?
All right. The obvious irony, first, that we're talking about white values. And secondly, was it in fact that bad, in the South, for black people? Well, yes. All you have to do is ask. It's a time in living memory. Equally obviously, not just in the South, either. But in a town like Atlanta, it was institutional. This is the world of Thomas Mullen's novels Darktown and Lightning Men, a world of tensions and temperament, accommodations and anxiety. A place of comforting convention and uncomfortable energies.
Some of you probably know I have a weakness for this time period, the late 1940's, and I've written a series of noir stories that take place back then. The stories involve the people and events of the time and place, and usually touch on some cultural or political ferment, the Red Scare, the mob takeover of the waterfront, running guns to Ireland or Palestine. One in particular, "Slipknot," takes a sidelong glance at race, in the context of fixing the book on a high-stakes pool game. The principals are two historical figures, rival gangsters Owney Madden, owner of the Cotton Club, and Bumpy Johnson, boss of the Harlem numbers. I have no idea whether these guys actually butted heads, back in the day, but it felt right to put them at odds. It was a way of sharpening the racial edge, to make it personal, an open grievance. And neither of them what you might call black-and-white, but equal parts charm and menace.
This is true of Thomas Mullen's books. They're about the color bar, in large degree, but one thing they're not is black-and-white. There are good people, and bad, and mostly in between, just like it is. Darktown is maybe the more traditional as a thriller, with its echoes of True Confessions, and Lightning Men less about a single criminal act than it is about a climate of violence, but both books are effectively novels of manners. You might be put in mind of Lehane or Walter Mosley, but I think the presiding godfather of the books is Chester Himes. Mullen is the more supple writer by far - which isn't to disrespect Himes, but let's be honest, he's working the same groove as Jim Thompson, it's lurid and it's unapologetically pulp - and Mullen's characters are round, not flat (E.M. Forster's usage). All the same, there's something about the weight these people carry, their mileage, their moral and physical exhaustion. This is material Himes took ownership of, and Mullen inhabits it like the weather, We all get wet in the same rain.
Don't mistake me. These books aren't dour. We're not talking Theodore Dreiser. Mullen's writing is lively and exact. He's sometimes very funny. He's got balance, he's light on his feet. And he does a nice thing with voice. The books are told with multiple POV, shifting between five or six major characters, black and white, male and female. You always know who it is, because the narrative voice rings true. The situation is lived-in. You feel your way into its physicality, and you can take the emotional temperature. You don't hang up on it, thinking, that's not a genuine black person speaking, or that's not white.
I realize I've been talking about theme, for the most part, and not giving you the flavor. Here's a cop in a bar.
He lifted the glass, nothing but three sad memories of larger ice cubes. "I'll take another."
When Feckless returned the full glass, it rested atop an envelope. Smith looked up at Feck, who peeled the triangle away and revealed cash stuffed inside.
That there was a lot of money, Smith saw. "I don't do that," he said, looking Feck in the eye.
"Pass it on to Malcolm, then. He could use it."
"He'd be very grateful. But you can give it to him yourself." Smith stood and walked away, leaving the full glass behind him as well, and wondering what lay at the end of the road he hadn't chosen.
Not that he isn't tempted. That's the underlying tension, the spine. What lies at the end of the road you don't take? What lies at the end of the road you do? Personal character - moral character, integrity - is about what you do when the going gets tough, not when it's easy, how you behave when you don't want to disappoint yourself. It's self-respect. It's not Jiminy Cricket, or concern for appearances. This is the engine that drives everyone in the books, whether toward good ends or bad. If you've got nothing to live with but your own shame, you've got nothing left to fight for.
Showing posts with label South. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South. Show all posts
28 February 2018
Heat Lightning
Labels:
Atlanta,
David Edgerley Gates,
police,
South,
stories
08 December 2014
It Was a Dark and Stormy Night
by Fran Rizer
Meet Shug
"I'm sorry, so sorry. I should have told you. Let me go. No one will ever know. You'll never see me again. I'm begging you: please, please let me go!"
The fearful pleading had no effect on Shug, nor did the sheer terror on Carly's face. Shug no longer wanted to be parked in a tiny sports car with Carly--much less during a horrific storm--but his maniacal rage was directed as much at life as it was toward Carly and the weather. Shug closed his eyes and slapped himself frantically, repeatedly pounding his hands against his face, wide-spread fingers beating against ears that couldn't stand hearing Carly's words.
Lightning streaked through the darkness and into the car, illuminating Carly's anguished face and naked body. Screaming unidentifiable words, Shug pulled a .38 from under the driver's seat.
"No! Oh, God, no!" Carly shouted and grabbed at the door handle, but it wouldn't work. Tried the window control. Still no way out. Hammered at the glass with clenched fists--desperate to escape.
"Bye, bitch," Shug said and pulled the trigger.
Once. Keerack! Twice. Keerack! Three times. Keerack! The harsh stench of gunpowder filled the air. Torrents of crimson gushed from the crater in the back of Carly's head. Gobbets of bloody tissue spattered on the shattered glass.
"Dead as hell."
Those words echoed in Shug's mind as his trembling hands clenched the steering wheel, trying to hold the battered old Ford on the road. Wind whipped against the vehicle and rocked it from side to side. Worn wipers battled against rain sheeting the windshield. He gave up on reaching his destination--a wooded area on the other side of town--and stomped the brakes. The car slid across the empty street before skidding to a stop beside the gutter.
"Damned sure dead as hell," Shug whispered while looking into the rear at Carly's naked remains."Not she . . . it. That dead body is an it," the killer thought. Its arms ended in bloody stumps, and the smooth legs bent awkwardly, obscenely. Shug stepped out into the rain and opened the back door. Streaming water splashed the corpse as he struggled to pull it from the Ford. His muscles burned from the strain. Carly's body felt heavier than when he'd moved it from the sports car to Carly's battered old Ford. The carcass plopped in the gutter.
Just as well. The front of the head was a big mess of bloody tissue and bone--leaving no clue to what the victim had looked like. This pleased Shug and brought more shrill laughter from his lips. No face, no clothes, no hands. The appearance had lied just as much as the garments had. Carly didn't deserve to be identified.
The .38 lay on the front seat. Shug reached across for it and dropped the gun onto the pavement before sliding back into the car. Soaked to the bone, he shivered. The full quotation returned to his mind as he drove away from the abandoned remains and weapon.
"The guy was dead as hell."
They were the opening words of an old Mickey Spillane novel that Shug had sneaked out of Father's private bookcase and read as a child. A recent issue of one of Shug's literary magazine subscriptions had stated that Charles Dickens's "It was the best of times; it was the worst of times" in A Tale of Two Cities was the finest opening sentence ever written. Screw that. "The guy was dead as hell" was much better.
Meet Katie Wray
"Darn! Darn! Darn!" Rain pounded the windshield so brutally that Katie Wray couldn't see the lines on the superhighway, even when lightning brightened the night sky. She'd almost run off the road when she exited I-26 onto I-95. Now she could barely distinguish the exit to Walterboro. Best get off the road and find a room for the night.
As she swerved onto the exit lane, the car hydroplaned into a spin. Katie forgot everything she'd ever known about handling skids and screamed as she lost control of the vehicle.
Miraculously, the movement stopped with the passenger side of the car slammed against a retaining wall. Katie patted herself to see if anything were broken or bleeding. She'd probably have some bruises from the seat belts, but the air bags hadn't inflated. She shook herself and lost some of the anger she'd been carrying against the rental agent for not having a compact available and forcing her into their most expensive rental--though possibly one of the safest--a Mercedes.
The loss of that fury made room for Katie's rage at her sister Maggie. A long day of delayed flights had left Katie worn out and eager to be off the plane when it landed after eleven o'clock that night. All summer long, her sister Maggie had used Katie's apartment and new Fusion free of charge--while promising to meet her at the Columbia Metropolitan Airport when Katie returned to South Carolina.
Katie realized she should have planned to come home for a few days between her summer tutoring out west and returning to work at Tanner Elementary School. "Weary." It was an old-fashioned word, but it described how Katie felt--totally exhausted. She'd looked forward to sleeping during the three-hour drive to her hometown, Tanner, South Carolina. Instead, she was battling a terrible rainstorm in a rental car at three in the morning because her sister Maggie had let her down as usual. Katie didn't even consider that Maggie might have forgotten. They'd spoken by phone right before Katie boarded the plane. Like so many times before, Maggie had chosen to do something else instead of meeting responsibility.
As she walked around the car to look at the damage, Katie stumbled. No tires had blown, and nothing seemed to be seriously bent though there was definitely some cosmetic damage. The Mercedes appeared driveable.
Whoosh! An old Ford came out of nowhere and nearly hit her. Katie hadn't seen it before it sped around her. She felt assaulted.
Comments
If you're still with me (and I hope you are), you've just met two of the main characters in Kudzu River as they appear in the first chapter. I'm already being asked, "Why'd you quit cozies?" The answer is that I haven't quit cozies; I've added thrillers and a horror that is scheduled for publication in 2015. There's another cozy (but it's not a Callie) half-done on my computer and another horror haunting my mind.
The questions about genre lead me to a question for fellow SleuthSayers and readers today:
Why do you write? Though some writers become wealthy, there are millions more who don't. What makes us write? My answer: To me, writing is similar to playing dolls when I was a child. I create an environment and characters and then I'm free to manipulate them however I please. The difference is that my doll characters are not all Barbies, but I'm still having fun controlling them. Does that mean that psychologically I have "control issues"or does it mean, in Madonna's words: "Girls just wannna have fun"?
It's time to share----------Why do you write?
The questions about genre lead me to a question for fellow SleuthSayers and readers today:
Why do you write? Though some writers become wealthy, there are millions more who don't. What makes us write? My answer: To me, writing is similar to playing dolls when I was a child. I create an environment and characters and then I'm free to manipulate them however I please. The difference is that my doll characters are not all Barbies, but I'm still having fun controlling them. Does that mean that psychologically I have "control issues"or does it mean, in Madonna's words: "Girls just wannna have fun"?
It's time to share----------Why do you write?
Kudzu River is a novel of abuse, murder, and retribution. It's a tale of a serial killer and how his actions entangle the lives of three women. Odyssey South Publishing is releasing it January 6, 2015.
Until we meet again, take care of . . . you!
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