crime noir – some favourites

I am since long addicted to crime fiction. Some of it I only consume, as good entertainment that lightens up life a bit (happiness through fictional crime…) without leaving any permanent traces. But, some crime novels manages to do something more than that – they entertain, are well written and say something about the contemporary society in a non-lecturing way. They give a perspective on the not-so-bright parts of the society. With a few exceptions, my favourite contemporary crime noir novels are written by authors from UK or the US.  For someone who knows a little about the Swedish book market, this might seem like a paradox since the Swedish crime fiction has boomed during the recent 10-15 years and seems to be ever growing. The publishers are flooding the book market with crime novels by an increasing number of writers. Mostly are written using the same standard formula and could have been written any time since the sixties – and this is not timelessness in a good sense. Passed best-before-date, boring and repetitious. As a crime novel addict I have ploughed through a substantial amount of these novels and have been surprised that so many are so bad written. This makes them unvoluntary comic – as parodies – and I hope that the Swedish publishers will begin to apply basic quality standards to crime novels again. There are exceptions as Stieg Larsson (who wrote the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo trilogy) and Jens Lapidus (author of the Stockholm noir trilogy), but they are rare. Another standard formula that has been popukar has been the “Swedish Crime Novel with a Social Conscience” . The genre started by the the writer couple Sjöwall-Wahlöö who wrote about the disillusioned detective inspector Martin Beck in ten books published from the mid-sixties to the mid-seventies. These books are considered as quality crime and I agree with that, but some of the writer they inspired uses the formula to write quite predictable, lecturing and mediocre crime novels that paradoxically don’t have much to say about the society of today – despite their effort to write “social noir”.  So – with the exception of a handful of talanted and entertaining Swedish (and a few Norwegian and Danish) crime writers I mostly read crime novels from US & UK and the globalized (thanks Amazon, Adlibris and Bokus!) book market makes it very easy to read in English these days. Unfortunately my French is not good enough for reading novels, otherwise I would try to widen my horizons a bit.

Anyway – this is becoming a very long intro to get to the main theme – writing about my latest find.  Some of my contemporary UK/US favourites are Sara ParetskyDennis Lehane, George PelecanosDenise Mina… to mention a few and I can now add another name to that list; Reggie Nadelson. She has been around for some time and already  written about 7-8 books about her hero – the (former) NYPD detective Artie Cohen – but I had missed her. Artie Cohen is a great character. He is a Russian immigrant who is still in love with New York City (despite its dark sides – which he sees more of than most people) . He is an original creation and doesn’t feel duplicated on someone else’s hero detective and succeeds to escape many of the traditional traps. He actually has his own fan site at Facebook. I’ve just finished Skin Trade (Original US Title was Sex dolls) – a brutal tale  about organized crime and trafficking. The main part of Skin Trade is set in Europe – Paris and Vienna – and it gives a perspective on both the falling of the wall and the Yugoslavian war and disintegration. I am actually impressed by her skilful way of depicting Paris, Vienna and central Europe.  At the moment I am in the midst of  Disturbed Earth and she describes New York and its surroundings in a way that both creates longing and is a kind of substitute for someone (like me) who has taken NY to her heart. It is clear that this is her city and she knows how to describe it without getting into clichés. The contemporary world is always present, but she never turns into lecturing and the noir part is quite un-posing. I’ll absolutely add her to my list of good social noir writers.

Pictures of Disturbed Earth and Skin Trade are linked from Arrow books, that published the books (in the UK).

Posted in american noir, crime, crime noir, dennis lehane, james ellroy, literature, sara paretsky, stockholm, sweden | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

blue, violet & purple – ten shades of ink on canson sketch paper

When I write letters I often I use good quality sketch or drawing paper instead of using (expensive) stationery of varying quality. I grew so tired of finding that  price and quality does not necessarily correspond when it comes to stationary and that it seldom is fountain pen friendly. At the same time I find it a little boring to write on copy paper.  Less expensive and almost always well worth the price (compared to regular pads). One of my latest findings is the Canson 1557 sketch pad with 120 g/m2  paper. It is a thick (but not too thick to be used as stationery) white paper with a smooth and pleasant texture and one of the most fountain pen friendly paper qualities I’ve tried. It defeats even a very stubborn featherer as Diamine Royal Blue – which feathers on most papers that otherwise are considered fountain pen friendly. I got so inspired by doodling on this new sketch pad that I made an instant ink test on it. All inks and pens (a wide variety) got on very well with the paper and I thought I’d might as well post the result. It was made in haste, but might give a feel of the paper and – of course – the ten Diamine shades of blue, violet, purple, and teal. It seems like it is almost impossible to capture the Imperial Blue and Sapphire Blue, but they are rather true to how they look in real life. The registrar’s ink is much more alive with a lot of beautiful shading than in the sample, but I think that this quick sample shows a fair picture of how they compare to each other. Click on the sample to view it in full size.

Inks sampled – all of them Diamine: Registrar’s (iron gall), Majestic, , Amazing Amethyst, Imperial Purple, Royal Blue, Steel Blue, Imperial Blue, Sapphire Blue, Preussian Blue, Teal. A very good comparison of the new Diamine colours Amethyst, Lavender and Marine (with Steel blue as reference can be found at FPN here. My favourites of the inks tested are: Majestic, Amethyst, Imperial Purple, Royal Blue and Steel Blue. The heavy majority of inks from Diamine in my ink stable is due to the simple fact that they are good, cheap (even shipped), comes in handy plastic 30 ml bottles (if you buy directly from Diamine). If you buy straight from them you also get a free carton with 18 (!) international standard cartridges if you buy three small bottles of ink… I have no other affiliation with them more than being a very satisfied customer.

Posted in canson, diamine, fountain pens, inks, paper, pens, writing | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments