Introduction
First, a confession. I have little business being the guest editor of this
volume. Although I have always read short stories of every kind with
appreciation, I seldom write them. My rate of story production can be
measured on a geologic scale, about one every decade. Looking at my
predecessors in this role, I would describe all of them as distinguished
practitioners of the form. Not so here. In other words, the opinions expressed
are not seasoned by an insider's experience. But as is so often true with
lawyers, a lack of qualifications will not keep me from speaking.
Let me start, then, by reflecting on the traditional title of this
series, Best American Mystery Stories. To be sure, some of the stories that
appear here, like Walter Mosley's "Karma," are elegant small mysteries, if
mystery is taken to have its traditional meaning as a story about the
investigation of a puzzling crime. Characteristically, mysteries focus on the
detection of the crime's perpetrator, or more broadly, discovering (or
revealing) why that enigmatic crime occurred. Andrew Klavan's "Her Lord and
Master" is a mystery in that second sense.
But many other stories included here never raise those questions.
Instead, what the fictions Otto Penzler and I have chosen hold in common is
their subject matter. Every one is about crime — its commission, its
aftermath, its anxieties, its effect on character. Best American Crime
Stories would be equally, if not more, apropos as the title of this book.
In fact, more than any other theme, these stories are portraits, in
styles ranging from sly to harrowing, of how crimes occurred — the evolution
of circumstances so that bad-acting becomes inevitable. "Vigilance" by Scott
Wolven or "Ringing the Changes" by Jeff Somers are only two of many
possible examples, both gritty and compelling. In fact, more than half the
stories here culminate in the commission of one particular offense. So as not
to spoil things, I will not name the crime, but let me say if you like all your
characters living at the end of a story, this may not be the book for you.
Yet, I would venture that crime is not the only point of intersection
between these stories. If you were to compare most of them to those in the
companion volume, Best American Short Stories, you might feel, more often
than not, that they somehow seem different. Despite what some critics
contend, the distinction is not in elegance of execution — many of these
stories, such as R. T. Smith's "Ina Grove," are technically masterful; nor in
the depth of psychological insight — Alan Heathcock's "Peacekeeper" is a
moving revelation of the interdependence of an individual and a community;
nor in the uniqueness of voice or vision. There are few American stylists as
distinctive as Elmore Leonard, whose usual roadside magic is displayed
in "Louly and Pretty Boy Floyd." The difference is that the majority of these
stories proceed on different assumptions about what a short story is
supposed to do when compared to what I'd call "mainstream" contemporary
stories that might be taught in a literature class.
If we are seeking the literary heritage of the majority of these
stories, we must hark back to the nineteenth century and the quintessential
form that was perfected by writers like Hawthorne and Poe in the United
States and Guy de Maupassant in France (and sublimely mastered by
Chekhov). The classic short story arose as a function of rapid increases in
literacy and the far broader circulation that resulted from newspapers and
magazines that were, in today's terms, hungry for content. Stories in that era
evolved from being anecdotal and diffuse to aiming to create a dominant
impression at the end. In pursuit of that goal, they took a conventional form
some of us were taught to recognize in grade and high school. They had a
beginning, a middle, and an end, meaning they presented a conflict, an
exposition, and a resolution. I'll call them three-act stories for convenience.
Mysteries are classic three-act stories, which is why naming these volumes
Best American Mystery Stories is actually very fair.
Most of the stories here adhere, at least roughly, to that
framework. They are tales in which the reader wants to know about the
situation as much as the character, where the traditional question of
suspense — "What happens next?" — is foremost. Laura Lippman's "The
Crack Cocaine Diet" or Mike MacLean's "McHenry's Gift" are fine examples
in which the denouement in both instances startled, and therefore delighted,
me. Often, in stories of this species, we care as much about how the
problem is worked out as we do the psychology of the main character. Ed
McBain's "Improvisation" is a glimmering case in point, as you'd expect of a
story that begins, "'Why don't we kill somebody?' she
suggested." "Edelweiss" by Jane Haddam develops the same theme and,
intriguingly, comes to a kindred resolution. This is not to suggest that
psychological insight is incidental or absent in these stories. Instead, the
assumption is that the resolution of conflict will provide a final and telling
window into character, and therefore that plot and character are functions of
one another. "Dust Up" by Wendy Hornsby and William Harrison's "Texas
Heat" employ that strategy to winning effect.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, James Joyce's
Dubliners abandoned the traditional three-act form of short fiction. Joyce's
epochal stories share the narrative approach of modernist poetry, and evolve
toward, in Joyce's chosen term, an "epiphany," a moment of realization, for
the reader first, and quite often, for the character, too. Emily Raboteau's brief
gem, "Smile," is an exquisite exemplar of that approach. The narration
evolves only as far as is necessary to achieve that insight. If you ask about
the character's circumstances — where she lives, what she does everyday —
they are often little changed. To the question, "What happened in the story?"
the answer might be, at least outwardly, "Not very much." Karen Bender's
potent and fully realized "Theft" provides a splendid illustration of this.
As should be clear, I am a devotee of stories of both kinds, and
therefore we've included stories of both schools. Moreover, it is certainly the
case that the distinctions I've suggested are not hard and fast ones. For
several decades now, the somewhat rigorous boundaries that existed forty
years ago between high and low culture in American literature have been
breaking down. Looking back, it is not unusual for some stories to appear in
both the Best Mystery and Best Short Story volumes. Joyce Carol
Oates's "So Help Me God" crosses the borders I've declared, which has been
typical of her world-revered body of work for decades now. R. T. Smith's "Ina
Grove" is a little bit of everything: it's a mystery by the definition I've included,
a searching exploration of individual psychology, and a story with a
beginning, middle, and end — several of them in fact. It is also a work of
imposing literary art. Indeed, several of these stories are really both fish and
fowl. Joyce was determined to wring meaning from the warp and woof of
typical daily experience, as opposed to the rare personal cataclysm that
crime, for example, represents. Since all of these are crime stories, they are
exiles from a pure-blooded Joycean kingdom, but Sue Pike's "A Temporary
Crown" or Emory Holmes's "A.k.a., Moises Rockafella" are nonetheless
moving portrayals of minds in the grip of decline that come to moments of
haunting crystallization.
Conventions are just that. They hold no special spell, except that
they give readers a better chance to understand. They are boxes into which
we conform our expectations in exchange for the opportunity to make out
meaning more plainly. I get aggravated only by the assumption that stories of
one kind are "better" than another. Although students of the short story have
been worshipping at Joyce's shrine for nearly a century, it is still the three-
act story that dominates American narrative. That remains the shape
repeated consistently on television and in the movies, as well as in novels,
not to mention at the water cooler. When your coworker starts out, "So I met
this guy at the health club," what you want to know is what happened next.
More to the point, whatever convention a story originates from, the
ultimate measure of its success will be tied to its originality, whether in
language (Raboteux and Smith), conception (like Jeffery Deaver's dazzlingly
clever "Born Bad"), style (Leonard), or character. On the last point, consider
the young Czech immigrants in C. J. Box's "Pirates of Yellowstone," who are
of immediate interest because we have not seen them before. That is the
great irony — the ultimate function of convention is to provide readers with a
series of conditioned expectations that the best work will in some regard then
transcend and defy, leading us to new ground. James Lee Burke's "Why
Bugsy Siegel Was a Friend of Mine" is an ostensible three-act, but it artfully
turns in another direction. Each of these stories exhibits some commendably
unique attribute that helps to convincingly project us into a coherent imagined
world from which we emerge enlightened in some way about our condition as
humans.
Scott Turow
Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Introduction copyright ©
2006 by Scott Turow.
Continues...
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