cover image Life Is Short and Then You Die: Mystery Writers of America Presents First Encounters with Murder

Life Is Short and Then You Die: Mystery Writers of America Presents First Encounters with Murder

Edited by Kelley Armstrong. Imprint, $17.99 (320p) ISBN 978-1-250-19639-2

Organized by crime and fantasy author Kelley Armstrong, this powerful anthology presents 18 short stories wherein teens’ first brushes with murder function as the fulcrum of life changes. Several selections involve murder’s aftermath, such as Y.S. Lee’s historical, lyrical “In Plain Sight,” inspired by a real-life female prisoner, and “Murder IRL” by Jeff Soloway, whose frank protagonist experiences severe acne, parental concern, and a killer in his virtual baseball league. Other contributions portray adolescents contemplating murder, as in Joseph S. Walker’s simmering “Gnat,” in which the eponymous victim of bullying captures a murder on camera and deliberates between justice and revenge, and in Barry Lyga’s darkly humorous “Six Ways to Kill Your Grandmother,” in which the teen son of a recently imprisoned serial killer considers how best to dispatch his senescent grandma. The authors chosen might have been more inclusive, and a few entries suffer from predictable twists (“The Boy in the Red Vans” by Rachel Vincent), uneven pacing (“Concealment” by Eileen Rendahl), and clunky dialogue (“Night of the Living Dog” by David Bart), but this anthology will nonetheless provide ample entertainment for young murder-mystery aficionados. Ages 15–up. (Sept.)