Amsterdam Noir (Akashic Noir) - Softcover

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9781617756146: Amsterdam Noir (Akashic Noir)

Inhaltsangabe

Walter van den Berg's "Get Rich Quick" was named the recipient of the inaugural Literatuurprijs Nieuw-West award!

"Every book in the Noir series serves as an introduction to a place. Besides the crime, the series and its editors have made it a point to address things like economic infrastructure, gentrification, and racial politics...Amsterdam Noir toes that line beautifully, touching on subjects like the impact of tourism, migration, and discrimination of Moroccans...In their introduction, editors Appel and Pachter say they want readers to know that bad things happen in Amsterdam, that the city 'also has its dark side, its shadowy corners.' However, what they ended up with is an anthology about a place where bad things happen not because of the psychogeography of the population, not because of corruption, gang violence, drug problems, or poverty, but because of human emotions--lunacy and jealousy. You could see that as a failure, but maybe it's not. Maybe the crime-free streets of Amsterdam are precisely what they wanted to show. Or maybe, like with most arthouse horror films, the point is that the monsters are not tied to the streets; they are always inside us."
--NPR

"The latest in Akashic's popular city Noir series heads to Amsterdam, a city whose ambivalence is on full display in the stories collected by editors Rene Appel and Josh Pachter. At once, Amsterdam is an idyllic city of orderly cafes, canals, relative abundance and safety; on the other, it's a place that has long dealt in sex, drugs, and other activities traditionally categorized as vice. It's a sometimes combustible combination, and the stories in Amsterdam Noir go a long way to probing the everyday noirs of Amsterdam's many and diverse residents."
--CrimeReads

"One of the best in a generally good series, with no story disappointing and the best genuinely gripping...This superior collection of noir fiction will appeal to all lovers of crime fiction--or, for that matter, good writing."
--Library Journal XPress Review, STARRED review

"An appealing compendium, with welcome doses of local color and atmosphere."
--New York Journal of Books

Akashic Books continues its award-winning series of original noir anthologies, launched in 2004 with Brooklyn Noir. Each book comprises all new stories, each one set in a distinct neighborhood or location within the respective city.

Brand-new stories by: Michael Berg, Anneloes Timmerije, Murat Isik, René Appel & Josh Pachter, Simon de Waal, Hanna Bervoets, Karin Amatmoekrim, Christine Otten, Mensje van Keulen, Max van Olden, Theo Capel, Loes den Hollander, Herman Koch, Abdelkader Benali, and Walter van den Berg.

From the introduction by René Appel and Josh Pachter:

Amsterdam has the amenities and, to a certain extent, the feel of a major world city, but one of its most attractive features is its relatively small size. It's easy to navigate on feet, by bike, and via its excellent public transportation network, especially with the semicircular perimeter of its famous Grachtengordel, or ring of concentric canals.

Like any other metropolis, though, Amsterdam also has its dark side, its shadowy corners--in other words, there is also an Amsterdam noir. No matter how beautiful, vital, and cheery a city might be, pure human emotions such as greed, jealousy, and the thirst for revenge will rear their ugly heads...with all their negative consequences. Amsterdam is a multidimensional city, populated by a wide assortment of social groups, and not all of those groups agree on what constitutes normal social values and mores. This results in a lively mix...and, as you will see, in problems.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

René Appel published his first thriller, Handicap, in 1987, and has written twenty more, two of which have received the Golden Noose, the annual award for the best Dutch-language crime novel. English translations of his stories have appeared in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, and several anthologies.

Josh Pachter is an American writer, editor, and translator. His short crime stories have been featured in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine and Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, among other places, and his translations of crime fiction by Dutch and Belgian authors appear regularly in EQMM. He lives in Northern Virginia.

Auszug. © Genehmigter Nachdruck. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Amsterdam Noir

By René Appel, Josh Pachter

Akashic Books

Copyright © 2019 Akashic Books
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-61775-614-6

Contents

Introduction, 11,
PART I: OUT OF THE PAST,
Michael Berg Schiphol Airport Welcome to Amsterdam, 19,
Anneloes Timmerije Centrum Spui 13, 37,
Herman Koch Watergraafsmeer Ankle Monitor, 58,
Simon de Waal Red-Light District Salvation, 74,
PART II: KISS ME DEADLY,
Hana Bervoets Van der Pekbuurt The Tower, 87,
Karin Amatmoekrim Oosterpark Silent Days, 107,
Christine Otten Tuindorp Oostzaan Soul Mates, 120,
PART III: TOUCH OF EVIL,
Mensje van Keulen Duivelseiland Devil's Island, 137,
Murat Isik Bijlmer The Man on the Jetty, 148,
Theo Capel De Jordaan Lucky Sevens, 163,
Loes den Hollander Central Station The Stranger Inside Me, 183,
PART IV: THEY LIVE BY NIGHT,
Max van Olden Grachtengordel Seven Bridges, 201,
Abdelka der Benali Sloten The Girl at the End of the Line, 215,
Walter van den Berg Osdorp Get Rich Quick, 231,
René Appel & Josh Pachter Museum District Starry, Starry Night, 249,
About the Contributors, 260,


INTRODUCTION

Darkness on the Edge of Town


"Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Akashic Airlines flight 1595 to Amsterdam."

Sometime between 1250 and 1275 AD, a small group of Dutch farmers dammed the Amstel, an unimpressive river that emptied into a nearby bay called the IJ. They built houses around the dam and the river, and so the village of Amstelredam was born. Over the years, as the village grew, its name eventually shortened to Amsterdam.

Amsterdam came into its own in the seventeenth century, the Dutch Golden Age, when it blossomed into both an important trade center and an equally important cultural center, home to many writers, such as P.C. Hooft and Joost van den Vondel, and artists like Rembrandt van Rijn and Govert Flinck.

The eighteenth century was a relatively quiet time for The Netherlands. While the country rested on its laurels, the city's population remained relatively stable. Only in the course of the nineteenth century did a new sense of vigor arise, and the 1800s are remembered as Amsterdam's second Golden Age.

In fits and starts, the city has continued to grow ever since — in 2017, its population reached around 850,000, including people from roughly 180 countries, making it one of the most international cities in the world.

In today's Amsterdam, almost anything goes. Take the availability of drugs, for example. The so-called coffee shops in which marijuana and hashish are openly sold have been in business since the 1980s. Where else in the world can you, without fear of arrest, ask a cop on the street to light your hand-rolled joint?

Amsterdam has the amenities and, to a certain extent, the feel of a major world city, but one of its most attractive features is its relatively small size. It's easy to navigate on foot, by bike, and via its excellent public transportation network, especially with the semicircular perimeter of its famous Grachtengordel, or ring of concentric canals.

Like any other metropolis, though, Amsterdam also has its dark side, its shadowy corners — in other words, there is also an Amsterdam noir. No matter how beautiful, vital, and cheery a city might be, pure human emotions such as greed, jealousy, and the thirst for revenge will rear their ugly heads ... with all their negative consequences. Amsterdam is a multidimensional city, populated by a wide assortment of social groups, and not all of those groups agree on what constitutes normal social values and mores. This results in a lively mix ... and, as you will see, in problems.

Amsterdam remains a trade center — and that includes illegal trade — which means there exists within its borders a criminal underclass that goes unnoticed by most citizens and visitors yet bubbles evilly beneath the surface of the city's daily life.

Gone are the halcyon days when the most common crime in Amsterdam was bicycle theft. Although the city's rates of murder, rape, violent crime, and total crime are significantly lower than the equivalent rates in the United States, there are murders and rapes, and there is opiate abuse and gang activity and violent crime.

It is perhaps worth noting that Willem Holleeder, the most notorious Dutch criminal in the country's history — a member of the gang that kidnapped beer heir Freddy Heineken in 1983 and held him for a ransom of some twenty million dollars — was a born-and-bred Amsterdammer.


"Your co-captains for this flight are René Appel and Josh Pachter, and our flight crew includes fifteen of The Netherlands' finest crime and literary authors."


In the pages that follow, you'll find fiction by winners of the Golden Noose, which is the award for the best Dutch-language crime novel of the year (Michael Berg won in 2013, and René Appel has won twice, in 1991 and 2001); by award-winning literary writers (Abdelkader Benali won the prestigious Libris Literature Prize in 2003; Hanna Bervoets has won both the Opzij Literature Prize and the BNG Literature Prize; Anneloes Timmerije won the Vrouw & Kultuur Debut Prize in 2006; and Mensje van Keulen's body of work has been honored with the Annie Romein, Charlotte Köhler, and Constantijn Huygens prizes); by established crime writers (including international best seller Herman Koch, Diamond Bullet winner Simon de Waal, Loes den Hollander, and Theo Capel), and by up-and-comers (such as Karin Amatmoekrim, Murat Isik, Walter van den Berg, Max van Olden, and Christine Otten).


"Our in-flight entertainment system features four channels for your reading pleasure."


In our opinion, each of the stories in this volume is a little film, and since one of the threads that ties them all together — along with their Amsterdam setting — is their noir-ness, we have chosen to organize them based on four of the greatest classic Hollywood noir films.

In Out of the Past (1947), directed by Jacques Tourneur and starring Robert Mitchum and Jane Greer, a private eye tries in vain to escape from his checkered personal history. Here in Amsterdam Noir, dark deeds from the past impact the present as a Syrian torture victim encounters his tormentor, a forty-year-old murder haunts a new homeowner, a convict on a weekend pass prowls the night, and a father wrestles with the death of his daughter.

In Kiss Me Deadly (1955), directed by Robert Aldrich and based on the novel by Mickey Spillane, Mike Hammer is caught up in a web of intrigue. The couples in this section of the anthology you now hold in your hands also become enmeshed in webs of intrigue, as a young mother falls in love with the wrong person, an elderly apartment dweller helps out a victimized neighbor, and a delivery boy's affair with an older woman takes a turn for the worst.

In Touch of Evil (1958), directed by Orson Welles and starring Welles, Charlton Heston, and Janet Leigh, corruption in a Mexican border town takes center stage. And corruption takes center stage in Amsterdam Noir as an innocent narrator witnesses the devil at work, a pedophile threatens innocent boys, money once again turns out to be the root of all evil, and a serial killer returns from the dead.

In They Live by Night (1948), directed by Nicholas Ray and starring Cathy O'Donnell and Farley Granger, an escaped con falls for his nurse. In...

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ISBN 10:  1617756857 ISBN 13:  9781617756856
Verlag: AKASHIC BOOKS, 2018
Hardcover