
Published by Akashic Books on November 4, 2014
I don't know if Belfast is the noirest city on Earth, as the  introduction to Belfast Noir claims -- surely Berlin provides strong  competition -- but many of the Belfast-based stories collected here are  fine examples of noir. Not all of the stories are dark, but the  collection establishes Belfast as a fertile setting for crime fiction.
The  Troubles and their continuing impact on life and culture in Belfast  provide a background for many of the stories. Phrases like "wearing more  jewellery than a Turf Lodge wide boy after a ram-raid at Lunn's" can  make a Belfast story difficult to follow for readers who are unfamiliar  with the city and its linguistic twists, but the local color (mostly  gray as neutral ground between the hues of competing flags) shines  through.
Some of the stories are true noir that showcase true writing talent:
The  missing-presumed-dead father in Ian McDonald's "The Reservoir" returns  to Belfast for his daughter's wedding and to confront the man who shot  him. In Brian McGilloway's "The Undertaking," a wry story of crime gone  awry, the undertaker of choice for Belfast's organized criminals is  recruited to drive a hearse carrying a coffin bearing unknown cargo. A  PI rescues a hooker and takes on a London crime boss who has designs on  Belfast in Sam Millar's "Out of Time."
Murder, blackmail, and a  wealthy man's dalliance with a teenage prostitute provide the  ingredients for a juicy but dangerous story for a crime reporter in  Garbhan Downey's "Die Like a Rat." The only noir story about dog  fighting I've ever seen (a difficult but ultimately satisfying read for dog  lovers) is "Pure Game" by Arlene Hunt. Alex Barclay wins the award for  best prose in "The Reveller," a story of a son seeking revenge for his  father's murder.
These stories are a little less noir but they are nevertheless excellent:
Lee  Child's "Wet With Raid" is an audacious story of a dirty American agent  who travels to Belfast to conduct dirty business. A barrister in Steve  Cavanagh's "The Grey" defends a salty old con artist who claims to be  innocent of a murder committed 30 years earlier. Perhaps the most  unusual story in the collection, Eion McNamee's "Corpse Flowers" is told  from the perspectives captured by surveillance cameras.
Two exceptional works are psychological profiles set against a background of crime:
Ruth  Dudley Edwards' chilling "Taking It Serious" is about a mentally  disturbed teen, his loving mum, the hidden secrets of his family, and  the legacy of the IRA. In "Ligature," Gerard Brennan gets inside the  tormented head of a troubled girl who does everything she can to get  outside of her own head while she's locked up in a juvenile jail.
One story is just plain funny, proving that humor can be found everywhere, even in Belfast:
Claire  McGowan's "Rosie Gant's Finger" features a boy detective of mixed  religious heritage whose office is his mother's living room. He pedals  his ten-speed to solve the mystery of a missing girl who got involved  with a Belfast hoodlum.
Not so noir but still reasonably interesting stories:
Fascinated  by the young woman who took up with her high school Spanish teacher, a  student in Lucy Caldwell's "Poison" tries to give life to a fantasy. In  the story I liked the least, Glenn Patterson's "Belfast Punk Rep," a  writer explores the death of punk in Belfast by interviewing a prisoner.  Even that story, however, isn't bad.
In fact, there isn't a bad story in the book.
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