Wednesday, February 3, 2021

Book Review: Miracle Creek by Angie Kim


 


Miracle Creek

Author: Angie Kim

Publisher: Picador

Date of Publication: April 7, 2020

Pages: 384


     This is a marvelous novel which succeeds on many levels.  First, it is a top-notch "who-done-it".  Four patients and parents of two of those are in a sealed multi-place hyperbaric chamber when a fire erupts.  One pediatric patient and another child's parent are killed in the mishap.  This event is told in the opening of the book and the background is all revealed through the murder trial of the dead child's mother.  Did she intentionally set the fire as all of the circumstantial evidence would suggest?  Could the perpetrator be any one of a number of other characters?  The reader has suspicions, but they change multiple times as details are elicited during the trial and through flashbacks.  The plot of Mystery Creek is a variation of the "Closed Circle Mystery" genre: a limited number of suspects are presented, all with motive, opportunity, and means to have committed the crime.  The reader needs to sort through this increasingly tangled story to try to figure out what exactly happened.

     Miracle Creek is also a series of extremely well drawn character studies.  The operators of the unlicensed hyperbaric chamber are a Korean immigrant family (the Yoos): a father (the chamber operator), his wife, and their teen-aged daughter.  The author calls on her own immigrant experience to portray these folks as flawed but tremendously sympathetic characters.  The other patients include a medical doctor with infertility, a child with cerebral palsy, and two children with different degrees of autism (and their mothers).  The prosecutor and the defense attorney are central to the story also, even as minor characters. 

     This book also succeeds in painting a very realistic picture of the immigrant experience in America.  These folks come to America looking for opportunity and often find exploitation, misunderstanding, and frustration instead.  The Kims fight prejudice, racial and ethnic stereotyping, and bullying in their workplace and in school.  It is not an easy path and the author questions the risk vs. benefit ratio in deciding to abandon their native country.   

    Finally, the author does a fantastic job of describing the frustrations and difficulties of parenting a special-needs child.  The parents' whole lives are consumed with therapy appointments, treatments and hands-on control of these very needy children.  The tasks take their toll, often causing relationships to splinter.  Is all of this turmoil, self-doubt, and aggravation enough to make a mother want to kill her own child?  Would she really strike a match and intentionally cause a fatal chamber explosion?  That is the question the court is trying to answer and the book addresses so adroitly.  

     This book intrigued me from the very start.  I am a retired hyperbaric physician and have experience as a hyperbaric facility accreditation surveyor, so I am very familiar with the risks of hyperbaric therapy, especially in unlicensed, non-hospital affiliated settings.  The author certainly did her homework in that regard and understands the issues quite well.

     This is a very well written book which is entertaining as well as informative.   It is very deserving of the Edgar Award it was awarded in April of 2020 as the Best First Mystery Novel.

Friday, January 8, 2021

Book Review: A Good Neighborhood by Therese Anne Fowler



A Good Neighborhood

Author: Therese Anne Fowler
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
Date of Publication: March 10, 2020
Pages: 320

     This is a novel for our times.  It is set in a bucolic racially integrated neighborhood in a classic Southern city (the author lives in Raleigh, North Carolina).  When intolerable nouveau-riche white people invade with their gentrification and scorched earth attitude towards the environment, conflict arises.  The characters are a bit stereotypical, but that sets the stage for the struggles which ensue.  The basic conflict involves a stately oak tree which is irreparably damaged when a huge home is built next door.  Racial, class, religious, age discriminations, and unfounded fear add dimension to and accelerate the tensions between neighbors.  

     About half way through this book, I couldn't decide whose story it was.  Was it the story of Valerie Alston-Holt, a college professor who happens to also be a black single mother with a talented, mixed-race teenaged son?  (She also owns the home with the oak tree.)  Was it the story of Xavier, her gifted musician-son who has earned a prestigious college scholarship?  Was it the story of Brad Whitman, the narcissistic good old boy who tears down an older home and builds the McMansion next to Valerie, in the process destroying her pastoral back yard?  Was it the story of Juniper, Brad's step-daughter who is drawn to her new neighbor, Xavier, like a moth to a flame despite the Purity Promise she has made at her evangelical church?  After reaching the book's heartbreaking conclusion, I realized that this is OUR story: America's story.  It's the story of what happens when events transpire based on false assumptions, age-old stereotypes, and ingrained prejudices.  It reminds me a bit of Celeste Ng's Little Fires Everywhere, in that the underlying theme is race, but so much more is layered into the story.  Hypocrisy abounds, self-centered agendas rule, and the common good gets thrown under a bus.
 
     The author uses an interesting technique: she introduces some chapters with unnamed omniscient third person narrators.  This Greek chorus of un-named neighbors are witnessing events unfold while trying not to be involved.  Some narrations are told with a retrospective feel, hinting at the story's eventual outcome. The interesting effect which this technique has is that it makes the reader feel a part of the neighborhood.  It makes you think "What would I be thinking or doing if this was going on down my street?"

     A Good Neighborhood is an excellent book.  It has a terrible sense of dread which propels you through the chapters.  The writing is crisp and economical - no wasted words.  The story really is a parable for our times.  There is much here to make the reader stop and ponder.  It makes you look at your own "good neighborhood" in a different light.  It is one of those books which entertains but at the same time teaches.  It is remarkable.  

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Book Review: God by Reza Aslan

     

Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Date of Publication: April 9, 2019
Pages: 320


     
 

      God: A Human History is a profound look at the depiction of he Divine since humans evolved and began recording things.  The author has a talent for taking complicated historical, archaeological and religious concepts and making them understandable to the non-academic.  The other attractive feature of this book is that the author shares his own personal faith journey and how he arrived at his current personal view of the divine.  

     In the Introduction, Aslan states that it is NOT the purpose of the book to prove the existence of God.  Belief in a divine being is faith, which the author elaborates is a personal choice for each of us.  What he tries to do in this book is to show how we have always tried to humanize the divine.  In fact, he states: “The entire history of human spirituality can be viewed as one long, interconnected, ever-evolving, and remarkably cohesive effort to make sense of the divine by giving it our emotions and our personalities….  In short, by making God us.”

     The book is divided into three parts: The Embodied Soul, The Humanized God, and What Is God?  In the first section, the author analyzes cave drawings found in Europe and identifies the earliest image ever found of God (the Sorcerer image from the Paleolithic Era found in France).  This and other drawings lead researchers to conclude that our ancestors shared an animistic belief that all living things are interconnected, that they all share in the same universal spirit.  This Sorcerer also represents the “God of the Beasts”, a concept which arose in multiple primitive cultures simultaneously.  The scientific debate regarding the origin of religion or religious thought began in earnest in the nineteenth century.  This coincided with Darwin’s introduction of concepts such as “natural selection” and “survival of the fittest.”  Is the development of religion an evolutionary adaptation?  The debate amongst anthropologists, social and other scientists continues today.  There is no doubt, however, that a “religious impulse” is present across many cultures and societies and developed in these different scenarios at similar paces.  The concept of a “soul” was the first religious belief which developed in humans.  The origin of our religious impulse, then is the result of “our ingrained, intuitive, and wholly experiential belief that we are, whatever else we are, embodied souls.”  The universal belief in the existence of the soul, then, “led to the concept of an active, engaged, divine presence that underlies all of creation.”  This concept of the divine presence was gradually personalized and eventually gave way to the single divine personality we know today as God.

     The second section of the book, “The Humanized God,” shows how different faith traditions added layers of human characteristics to their concept of the Divine.  Aslan concludes by saying “that what began as an unconscious cognitive impulse to fashion the divine in our image – to give it our soul – gradually became, over the next ten thousand years of spiritual development a conscious effort to make the gods more and more human like – until, at last, God became literally human.”  It is fascinating the way the author shows us cultures, such as the Greeks, who developed “lofty persons” or high gods and lesser gods, each representing some aspect of human nature.  He also introduces the concept of politicomorphism, or the divinization of earthly politics.  Aslan states: “In each case, in every empire, and throughout all of Mesopotamia, as politics on earth changed, the politics of heaven changed to match.  Just as in the face of fear and terror, the free citizens of Mesopotamia’s independent city states abandoned their primitive democracy and  voluntarily handed absolute power to their kings, so, too, did the citizens of heaven make one or another of the gods the unchallenged ruler over the rest.  Theology shifted to conform to reality, and the heavens became an amplified projection of the earth.”

     The third section of the book: “What is God?” consists of three chapters: “God is One”, “God is Three” and “God is All”.  In the first of these chapters Aslan adroitly explains the development of the concept of monotheism, tracing the Hebrew God back to Abraham and through Moses.  In the second chapter we learn of the conundrum of early Christianity: was Jesus fully human, fully divine, or both?  If He is divine, how does that reconcile with the Jewish tradition of monotheism?  The divinity of Jesus is broached in the Gospel of John and reconciled by the Council of Nicea in 325 C.E. and, finally, in the writings of Augustine of Hippo.  The concept of the Trinity was born: God is eternal and unchanging, but nevertheless exists in three forms: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.  All three share the same measure of divinity and all three existed at the beginning of time.  As Aslan states: “And if this idea causes confusion, if it defies logic and reason, if it seems to contradict the very definition of God, then it is simply the task of the believer to accept it as a mystery and move on.”  Aslan further opines that this humanization of the divine in the concept of the Trinity put Christianity on a collision course with the final monotheistic tradition which would come about 100 years later: Islam.  The third chapter, “God is All” is a concise summary of the rise of Islam and Muhammad’s return to the monotheism of the Jewish tradition.  To Muhammad, God is indivisible, and further, Muhammad attempted to dehumanize the divine.  Islam has no images or caricatures of God.  The Quran does not proclaim that humans are made in God’s image and Muslims deny the concept of the Trinity and the divinity of Jesus.  Aslan then goes on to describe the development of Sufism, a mystical version of Islam.  In Sufism, God is recognized as inseparable with His creation, creating a form of pantheism (God is everywhere).  He goes on to state: “These Sufis were claiming unity with the divine,  Indeed, for most Sufis, the mistake of Christianity lies not in violating the indivisible nature of God by transforming God into a human being;  rather, it lies in believing that God is only one particular human being and no other.  According to Sufism, if God is truly indivisible, then God is all beings, and beings are God.”  He concludes with “God is not the creator of everything that exists.  God is everything that exists.

   In his Conclusion, Aslan makes the case for his pantheism, which he came to through Sufism.  He reiterates the main themes of the book: the universal primitive belief in a “soul” separate from our physical selves which led to our belief in a divine being; the propensity to humanize this divine being as evidenced by multiple independent cultures; the development of the concept of monotheism which was reconciled with the divine/human Jesus of Nazareth through the evolution of the concept of the Trinity; the return to “true” monotheism and rejection of the Trinity and divinity of Jesus by Muhammad; and finally, the idea of pantheism (God is present in all of His Creation) exhibited by the pantheism of Sufism.  This long and winding road actually mirrors the author’s own spiritual journey as he notes in the conclusion.    


Sunday, July 12, 2020

Book Review: The Last Stone by Mark Bowden



The Last Stone

Author: Mark Bowden
Publisher: Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
Date of Publication: April 2, 2019
Pages: 304


     I have vague recollections of the F.B.I. and the Bedford, Virginia, Sheriff's office conducting searches and excavating some private land in Thaxton in 2014.  I remembered that it was in relation to a cold case from Maryland in the mid-1970s, but I did not remember the details or the conclusion.  Mark Bowden, the author of such classics as Blackhawk Down and Killing Pablo, has written the definitive narrative of this compelling story.

     Bowden was a fledgling newspaper reporter in 1975 when two young sisters, ages 10 and 12 disappeared from the Wheaton Mall in Montgomery County, Maryland (a suburb of Washington, D.C.).  John Lyon, the father of the two girls (Katherine and Sheila) was a popular D.C. area radio personality and the hunt for the girls and the mystery of what happened to them captured the attention of the entire area.  Although exhaustive searches were conducted and a multitude of leads were followed, the case was never solved and there was no closure for the family.  Bowden was haunted by it over the years.  He was intent on following up on it when the story gained new life in 2013.

      Credit goes to a group of Maryland investigators who in 2013 went back through the Lyons case with a fine-toothed comb.  They had a person who they thought might be connected and were looking for any details which would link that person to the unsolved crime.  What they found instead was a peculiar witness statement from an 18-year-old boy named Lloyd Welch who went to the police 5 days after the girls' disappearance.  This teen claimed to have seen the girls leaving the mall with a man.  This statement was discounted at the time as non-credible.  Following up on the teen who gave the statement, these investigators located him and found a man with a long criminal record who was currently incarcerated in Delaware for child molestation.  Photos of this man as a teen were eerily similar to a composite sketch from 1975 of a young man seen in the mall talking to Sheila and Kate Lyon.

     The Lyon case was complicated over and above the age of the case.  There were no bodies, no crime scene, and no other forensic evidence.  These investigators began a three-year-long interrogation of Lloyd Welch.  Welch turned out to be an inveterate liar.  He cooperated with the investigation to a point, but always spinning a narrative which put him in the clear.  These detectives ferreted through the disinformation and followed up every detail revealed by Welch.  As time went on, Welch implicated many family members, including his father, an uncle, and a nephew.  The Welch family had cousins in Thaxton on Taylor's Mountain.  Lloyd Welch along with his girlfriend and his father visited this family farm after the Lyon sisters' disappearance and there were various reports from Virginia family members about a large bonfire and a bloody duffle bag being destroyed in the fire. 

     Eventually a joint investigation by the Maryland detectives, the Bedford Sheriff's office and the F.B.I. resulted in indictments and a trial.  Unfortunately, even with this exhaustive work by law enforcement, many questions about the fate of the Lyon sisters remain.

     Bowden discusses the psychological toll this investigation took on the detectives who were so invested in finding the truth and were constantly deceived by Welch. The book does not delve into the crime's effect on the Lyon family, except to note that the one remaining sibling, an older brother, went into law enforcement.  This book gets a bit tedious at times, many long stretches being basically transcripts of the interview tapes with Lloyd Welch.   It is fascinating, though, to see the dogged determination and old-fashioned detective work performed by the four Maryland investigators: Dave Davis, Chris Homrock, Mark Janney, and Katie Leggett.  In these days of  DNA evidence and genetic genealogy, they were able to piece together a case using psychology, hunches, and intuition to come to at least a partial resolution of the Lyon sisters' disappearance.  Central Virginians will enjoy reading this if, like me, they have recollections of the case but want to know the whole story.  The Last Stone is a reminder that we live in a dangerous, treacherous world and evil still lurks about even in the most unexpected places. 

Thursday, June 4, 2020

Book Review: Last Night at the Lobster by Stewart O'Nan


Last Night at the Lobster











Last Night at the Lobster

Author: Stewart O’Nan
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Date of Publication: November 1, 2007
Pages: 160

Some authors write great epics about heroic people.  Others write about ordinary people in extra-ordinary circumstances.  I’ve always admired authors who could tell stories about ordinary people and their every-day lives and make those stories interesting.  It’s an added bonus if the author can make those same stories humorous, poignant and thought provoking at the same time.  Anne Tyler is one of those authors.  So is Stewart O’Nan.  In this novel Stewart O’Nan creates a culture of average lower middle class workers and restaurant customers who collectively tell an all too familiar story of displacement, insecurity and anxiety.  He introduces these characters quickly but deftly and uses dialogue to help us know and understand them like they were old friends. 

Last Night at the Lobster is O’Nan’s twelfth novel.  He also has several non-fiction titles to his credit, including one he co-wrote with Stephen King about the Boston Red Sox.  The author grew up in Pittsburgh, went to undergraduate school at Boston University and now lives in Connecticut.  Small-town New England is the setting for this wonderful short novel.

The novel describes closing night for a marginally successful Red Lobster just off of an interstate highway in Connecticut.  Upper management has decided to close the restaurant instead of spending what it would take to remodel it.  The story is told by the Lobster’s long-time manager, Manny DeLeon.  Manny takes great pride in “his” restaurant and although he is grateful that he has been offered another job, he is not looking forward to the demotion to assistant manager at a new Olive Garden. 

The novel opens with Manny parking his dilapidated Buick Regal in the Lobster parking lot and smoking a joint before opening.  A major snowstorm is beginning as well.  Manny has to deal with his disgruntled employees, some of whom have been let go and four of which are following Manny to the Olive Garden.  There are petty jealousies among the waitresses and major attitude problems with the kitchen staff.

The rest of this short novel (or long short story) details the frustrations and disasters which occur on this last evening.  A large office party comes in and neither waitress wants them because large parties are notoriously bad tippers.  Two women have lunch with a totally undisciplined toddler.  The final blow comes right before closing when a busload of Japanese tourists come in to use the bathroom (the bus driver claims that they all got dysentery at a Red Lobster farther south on the interstate).

All the while Manny has to juggle a minimal inventory, malfunctioning equipment, a blizzard and employee insurrection.  Few of you know this about me, but I abandoned a career in the restaurant business to pursue medicine.  I had rocketed through the fast food industry and was the “Special Whopper” bench guy at the Falls Church Burger King when I realized there had to be a better way to make a living.  While in college I also worked for a year or so at Blackie’s House of Beef at 22nd and M Streets in D.C. (Anyone ever go there?  Remember the blue cheese and crackers before dinner?).   I can recognize some of my own restaurant experiences in this melancholy, but at times hilarious, novel. 

Last Night at the Lobster does have a purpose other than pure entertainment, however.  I think that the value of the book is that it points out the comfort of familiarity and the reassurance of routine.  The closing of this restaurant rocks Manny’s world, as well as that of all of the other characters in the book, including the regular customers.  Uncertainty and change do not always bring out the best in people, as this book demonstrates quite well.  One reviewer calls Last Night at the Lobster “a perfectly observed slice of working class life.”  This book was written and published long before this current economic crisis and job loss.  However, the author creates very real characters and uses dialogue superbly to tell a fabulous fable for our times. 

(Note: This Review was originally published in "LamLight", the physician newsletter for the Lynchburg Academy of Medicine in 2008)

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Book Review: Descartes's Secret Notebook by Amir D. Aczel





Descartes’s Secret Notebook

Author: Amir D. Aczel
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
Date of Publication: October 10, 2006
Pages: 288


            This fascinating and highly readable book is part biography, part mystery and part treatise on philosophy and mathematics.  Rene Descartes lived from 1596 to 1650.  His life was one of adventure and discovery.  His philosophy was hotly debated at the time and his discoveries in mathematics were and are regarded as genius.  This author tries to add another layer to the legend by examining a purported secret notebook, long lost but copied in part by German mathematician Gottfied Wilhelm Leibniz after Descartes’ death.

Rene Descartes was born to a wealthy family in the town of Chatellerault, France.  He was baptized in the Roman Catholic Church and remained a devout and loyal Catholic his entire life.  His mother died in childbirth a year later and Descartes’ own health as a youth is described as poor.  He received what we all recognize as the great advantage of a Jesuit education at what is now a military academy in the town of La Fleche, the Prytanee National Militaire.  He then received a doctor of laws degree in 1616 and moved to Paris.  In Paris he developed his interests in mathematics, physics and eventually, philosophy.  He also traveled extensively to the Netherlands and Denmark.  His health as an adult was much improved and he never lost his interest in the military.  He even joined the army of Maximilian, the duke of Bavaria, at the beginning of the Thirty Years War.  It was during this time as a volunteer soldier in Maximilian’s army that he began his studies and interpretations of geometry and science.  Eventually Descartes settled in Holland where his Cartesian philosophy created controversy.  Everyone is familiar with “I think, therefore I am” (or “Cogito, ergo sum”), but the basis for this definitive statement is a very concise, even mathematical, proof of the existence of God.  This was the time of turmoil between the Roman Catholic Church and the Protestant denominations and the acceptance of Descartes’ reasoning was not universal. He was even accused of the serious charge of atheism despite his devout Catholic heritage and practice.  Eventually Descartes became the philosophy instructor for Queen Christina of Denmark.  There were jealousies between Descartes and the Queen’s other instructors as Descartes quickly became the young Queen’s favorite.  The fact that the others were strict Calvinists played a role.  Descartes died under somewhat suspicious circumstances in Sweden in 1650.  There are suggestions that he may have been poisoned by a rival.  His belongings were catalogued and shipped to relatives in France.  Eventually many of his original documents, including the secret notebook alluded to in the book’s title, disappeared.

The secret notebook was a private notebook which Descartes never intended to publish.  He used codes and symbols that were indecipherable for centuries.  Part of this notebook was copied by Leibniz shortly after Descartes death and that is all that remains of the document.  Some historians felt that this notebook represented Descartes membership in a secret society, the Rosicrucians.  Others felt that Descartes had discovered the origins of the universe.  It was not until 1987 when Pierre Costabel published his definitive analysis of Leibniz’ copy of Descartes’ secret notebook that the true meaning of the secret notebook was revealed.  Descartes had discovered a coveted formula for a rule which governs the structure of three dimensional solid objects.  This was mystery which had eluded Plato and the other Greek geometricians as well as all other mathematicians in history.  He had discovered the modern field of topology centuries before its time.  The reason he repressed this discovery was because it supported Kepler and Copernicus and their analysis of planetary motion around the sun.  The timing of this coincided with the Roman Catholic Church’s prosecution of Galileo for heresy.  Descartes, the loyal Catholic, did not want to suffer the same fate.

There are many interesting side stories in this tale, including the simultaneous discovery of the calculus by Newton in England and Leibniz in Germany.  There may be a connection between these two men which would be, of course, Rene Descartes.  Descartes private life is examined as far as historical facts allow, including a possible marriage to a servant girl and a relationship of some sort with Princess Elizabeth of Bavaria who was living in exile in Holland at the same time as Descartes.  The exact relationship between Descartes and Queen Christina is a mystery as well.  At about age 40 Descartes noticed his first grey hairs.  He felt this was a sign of impending death and began dissecting animals by the hundreds in an attempt to discover the secret to a prolonged life.  He greatly altered his diet, becoming basically a vegetarian.

This is a fascinating book.  I remembered very little of Descartes from my Philosophy 101 class and this book made me wish I had paid more attention.  The historical aspects of this time are equally absorbing.  The author makes the mathematics understandable (not an easy task in my humble opinion) and the philosophy enjoyable.  

Rene Descartes
1596-1650


Monday, May 18, 2020

Book Review: Alabama Noir, edited by Don Noble



Alabama Noir

Edited by Don Noble
Publisher: Akashic Books
Date of Publication: April 7, 2020
Pages: 256 

This anthology is part of the Akashic Noir Series which began in 2004 with Brooklyn Noir. There are now over 100 books in this series from locations around the world and featuring many “name” authors as editors.  Each edition features writers from the area represented which lends great authenticity to the stories.  Alabama Noir is one of the latest books released and is edited by Emmy Award winning screenwriter Don Noble.

I was immediately impressed with the roster of authors included in this volume, mainly because of the diversity within it.  Out of the sixteen stories, five were penned by women and four by people of color.  Some of my favorite fiction writers are here as well, including Ace Atkins, Tom Franklin and Winston Groom.  In fact, I purchased this book because of a social media post by Atkins promoting his story “Sweet Baby”. 

In the Introduction Noble notes that Alabama of the 1960s was dominated by race issues and the civil rights movement.  He notes that unfortunately race problems still exist and points to the inadequacies in the justice system and in the state’s prisons.  There is movement towards coming to grips with the past and trying to move past this history as evidenced by the work of attorney and social justice advocate Bryan Stevenson and the establishment of the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery.

Noble also gives a brief description of the Noir genre, using The Maltese Falcon as the gold standard example.  The three dominant themes of the genre include failed romance and femme fatales, greed and revenge, each with varying amounts of violence mixed in.  This anthology contains excellent examples of all three, with the added dimensions of racial discord and social inequality mixed in.

I enjoyed all of the stories, but I did have a few favorites.  The first was “Deep Water, Dark Horizons” by Suzanne Hudson, a native of Georgia but a longtime resident Mobile and Fairhope.  The story is set in Fish River.  An elderly landowner and a tenant (who are friends) argue over a broken septic system when the tenant rekindles an old flame on the internet.  The landowner is described:

                “It was his mind-set, to be wary.  The older he got, the less he trusted folks, even old friends. He had just about stripped away anyone who ever mattered to him, stripped away with suspicion, always, of ulterior motives.”

Another favorite was “What Brings You Back Home” by Michelle Richmond who was raised in Mobile.  In this story a mom and widow whose child and husband were killed in a mass shooting who seeks and takes revenge on a Senator who voted against gun control.  Another example of a superb story is “The Junction Boys” by D. Winston Brown an author from Ensley, Alabama who now lives in Birmingham.  Here a young veteran returns home to confront his first girlfriend’s father who sexually abused her.  The character’s state of mind is described:

                “The information at first swirled around Colesbery’s head, then he felt that twitch in his stomach that always came before a mission.  The plan materialized in his brain – how he would do it, when he would do it, where he would do it.  He rubbed his eyes and then stretched his fingers wide, balled them tight, stretched them again, and settled back in the moment.”

                This is a magnificent collection of short stories.  You don’t have to be a noir fan to appreciate the great writing and captivating characters.  Even the more violent stories are not graphic.  I was thoroughly entertained from start to finish.  I am encouraged to purchase more of the books in the Akashic Noir series.