Sarah M. Chen with “A Family Matter.”
Richie Narvaez with “The Gardener of Roses.”
Editor Gary Phillips with “Spiders and Fly.”
Synopsis:
How does witnessing a crime change a person? This
powerful collection of stories by a star-studded roster of contributors
examines this very question, with proceeds benefitting the Alliance for Safe
Traffic Stops.
Inspired by recent true events, the all-original
stories in Witnesses for the Dead are set in motion by the act of witnessing.
The characters who populate these pages are not themselves the perpetrators of
the crimes they see, but as they grapple with what to do—take action or retreat
into the shadows—their lives are indelibly changed.
In “Envy” by Christopher Chambers, a sweet, shy
wallflower looks on as something horrific happens in his neighborhood—revealing
something horrific about himself. Agatha Award–winner Richie Narvaez’s “The
Gardener of Roses” sees a Puertorriqueña college student on the run from the
FBI for her accidental involvement in a “terrorist” plot. Anthony Award–winner
Gary Phillips confronts police corruption in “Spiders and Fly.” And the
protagonist of “A Family Matter” by IPPY Award–winner Sarah M. Chen investigates
the murder of a stranger, leading her to question the political structure of
Taiwan entirely. Other stories feature a brothel, the film industry, immigrant
detention centers at the Mexico-US border, World War II–torn France, and the
COVID-19 pandemic. The stories are incisive, unflinching, wry, dark, and, in
some cases, terrifying. You’ll ask yourself: If I saw what they saw, what would
I do?
Edited by Anthony Award–winner Gary Phillips and
Shamus Award–winner Gar Anthony Haywood, the collection includes contributions
from NAACP Image Award–winner Pamela Samuels Young, New York Times bestsellers
Cara Black and Tod Goldberg, Edgar Award–winner SJ Rozan, Agatha Award–winner
Richie Narvaez, and more.
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