Prague noir /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Brooklyn, New York : Akashic Books, [2018]
©2018
Description:269 pages : map ; 21 cm.
Language:English
Series:Akashic noir series
Akashic noir series.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11436716
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Mandys, Pavel, 1972- editor.
Margala, Miriam, editor.
ISBN:9781617755293
161775529X
Summary:"Brand new stories by: Martin Goffa, Stepan Kopriva, Milos Urban, Jiri W. Prochazka, Chaim Cigan, Ondrej Neff, Petr Stancik, KaterinaTuckova, Marketa Pilatova, Michal Syora, Michaela Klevisova, Petra Soukupova, Irena Hejdova, and Petr Sabach." -- from the back cover.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The 14 crime stories set in Prague in this superior entry in Akashic's noir series offer armored car robbery, kidnapping, murder masked as suicide, and more-not bad for a burg that, as the editor notes in his intro, didn't even have "the profession of private detective" until 1990. For long years under the control of a police state, the ancient city earlier witnessed Nazi occupation, and before that the legend of the golem haunting the ghetto. Chaim Cigan-billed as "currently the chief rabbi of the Czech Republic"-draws authoritatively on the city's mystic background in "The Magical Amulet"; Michal Sykora's "Percy Thrillington" presents a by-the-book puzzle-style mystery with clues from the music catalogue of Paul McCartney. Petr Stancík spins a lively and unusual tale in "The Cabinet of Seven Pierced Books," in which figures such as the "autarchic detective, one Egon Alter" can drop casually into the action-delightfully reminiscent of Avram Davidson's fantastical adventures of Dr. Eszterhazy. In the varied and polished content of this volume, readers will find much to amuse. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Murder and mayhem erupt, even in fairy-tale Prague.Editor Mandys maintains that it may be hard to imagine dark doings taking place virtually in the shadow of Prague Castle, yet he manages to harvest 14 artful tales that speak directly to the contrary. Although there are few standard whodunits, Prague's long history provides fertile ground for evildoers. In some, like Ond?ej Neff's "Marl Circle," the seeds of menace are sown soon after the city's founding 2,000 years ago. Others explore more recent sources of evil, from the Holocaust, which claims the hero's father in Chaim Cigan's "The Magical Amulet," to the Soviet occupation, the chief source of the misery in "The Life and Work of Baroness Mautnic," by Kate?ina Tu?kov. Some, like Milo Urban's "Disappearances on the Bridge" and tpn Kop?iva's "Amateurs," are almost shockingly modern. Others, like Petra Soukupov's "Another Worst Day" and Martin Goffa's "Three Musketeers," explore sorrow so universal they could be set at any time and any place. And some seem particularly Czech, like Ji? W. Prochzka's "The Dead Girl from a Haunted House," which takes place during carnival season, and Petr Stan?k's "The Cabinet of Seven Pierced Books," a tale of the Golem.Perhaps nowhere but Prague do vice and enchantment live at such close quarters, and Mandys' collection captures both beautifully. A lovely addition to Akashic's venerable series. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review