Following the success of Paris Noir, the Akashic Noir Series has expanded to include the famously diverse and sometimes controversial suburbs of this legendary city.
‘A treasure chest of resources for any noir author seeking a more gruesome approach or a more relentless destruction of the soul. One might hope the real Paris suburbs are not so dark and blood drenched. But by the end of the collection, that hope seems almost foolish, and the body found on the quay seems to be the lucky guy in the story.’
—New York Journal of Books
‘The short stories center on the suburbs of Paris, fertile soil for all sorts of resentment and violence. . . .For lovers of crime noir short fiction, these are 12 stories of life lived in the raw.’
—Library Journal
‘Dark tales shine a bright light on some little-seen parts of greater Paris.’
—Kirkus Reviews
‘Paris’s suburbs—a mix of slums, posh neighborhoods, fading industrial centers, and the city’s notorious housing projects that lie out of the sight of most tourists—provide the setting for [these] 13 tales.’
—Publishers Weekly
Featuring brand-new stories by: Cloé Mehdi, Karim Madani, Insa Sané, Christian Roux, Marc Villard, Jean-Pierre Rumeau, Timothée Demeillers, Rachid Santaki, Marc Fernandez, Guillaume Balsamo, Anne Secret, Anne-Sylvie Salzman, and Patrick Pécherot. (All stories were written in French and translated into English by Katie Shireen Assef, David Ball, Nicole Ball, and Paul Curtis Daw.)
From the introduction by Hervé Delouche:
The term Greater Paris is in vogue today, for it has an administrative cachet and seems to denote a simple extension of the capital—as if a ravenous Paris need only extend her web. However, it was not our goal to embrace the tenets of the metro area’s comprehensive plan, aka the Grand Projet, envisioned as a future El Dorado by the planners and developers. Rather, our aim was to depict the Parisian suburbs in all their plurality and diversity. Without pretending to encompass every spot on the map, we instead opted to give voice and exposure to the localities chosen by the writers who have been part of this adventure. Thus, we decided to adopt the word “suburbs”— in the plural, obviously, for the periphery of the capital is not a homogeneous bloc, nor is it reducible to a cliché like “the suburban ring” . . . Here are thirteen stories, decidedly noir, to be savored without sugar or sweetener.
İçerik tablosu
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: The Insulted and the Rebellious
‘I Am Not Paris’ by Cloé Mehdi (Fleury-Mérogis)
‘The Morillon Houses’ by Karim Madani (Montreuil)
‘Seeing Is Believing’ by Insa Sané (Sarcelles)
‘The Metamorphosis of Emma F.’ by Christian Roux (Mantes-la-Jolie)
Part II: Attempts at Escape
‘Beneath the Périphérique’ by Marc Villard (Saint-Ouen)
‘The Donkey Cemetery’ by Jean-Pierre Rumeau (Fontainebleau)
‘Pantin, Really’ by Timothée Demeillers (Pantin)
Part III: Scarfaces of the Suburbs
‘To My Last Breath’ by Rachid Santaki (Saint-Denis)
‘The Baroness’ by Marc Fernandez (Neuilly-sur-Seine)
‘Men at Work: Date of Completion, February 2027’ by Guillaume Balsamo (Ivry-sur-Seine)
Part IV: Ghosts from the Past
‘The Shadows of the Trapèze’ by Anne Secret (Boulogne-Billancourt)
‘Strange Martyrs’ by Anne-Sylvie Salzman (Arcueil)
‘The Day Johnny Died’ by Patrick Pécherot (Nanterre)
Yazar hakkında
Hervé Delouche is a noir literature specialist, columnist, conference moderator, and noir festival
coordinator. He was in charge of the full reissue of Jean Meckert’s work for Éditions Joëlle Losfeld, and he works as a copy editor for the French publishers Gallmeister, Rivages, and le Seuil. From 2007 to 2016 he was the president of 813, the first French association of noir literature lovers.