cover image Mississippi Noir

Mississippi Noir

Edited by Tom Franklin. Akashic, $29.95 (288p) ISBN 978-1-61775-228-5

Mississippi, as Franklin notes in his introduction, has the most corrupt government, the highest rate of various preventable ills, and the highest poverty rate in the country. In short, the state is a natural backdrop for noir fiction. The 16 stories in this uneven Akashic anthology emerge from a cauldron of sex, race, ignorance, poverty, bigotry, misunderstanding, and sheer misfortune, though few of them take advantage of the possibilities of such a mix. Most tales are variants on the theme of two people having sex and then something bad happening to one or both of them—which is a limited exploration of this fairly complex genre, dealing as it does with the spectrum of human nature’s dark side. Still, readers will enjoy those entries that do stand out for their originality: Mary Miller’s “Uphill,” about a man’s effort to take a picture; Jimmy Cajoleas’s “Lord of Madison County,” which follows a drug deal gone strange; and Andrew Paul’s tale of innocent evil, “Moonface.” (Aug.)