Today is publication day for the new anthology, Brutal
& Strange: Stories Inspired by the Songs of Elvis Costello. Published
by Down & Out Books, the read includes SMFS list member Gary Phillips’s
short story, My Aim is True. The read is available from the publisher,
Amazon,
and other vendors.
Publisher Description:
One of popular music’s most
prolific and creative composers, Elvis Costello has written songs in every
conceivable genre: pop, reggae, rock, country, funk, soul and jazz, but also
for full orchestras and string quartets. What you may not have noticed is that
a surprising number of these songs are crime stories—not mere nods toward
unsavory events featuring questionable characters, but complete tales of murder
and violence told in verse.
Costello’s
song titles alone confirm one of his preferred themes: “Accidents will Happen,”
“American Gangster Time,” “Bullets for the Newborn King,” “Coal-Train
Robberies,” “The Final Mrs. Curtain,” “Hetty O’Hara Confidential,” “Kinder
Murder,” “My Thief,” “Shabby Doll,” “Shot with His Own Gun,” “That’s How You
Got Killed Before” and “Watching the Detectives,” among them. His album titles
include “Blood & Chocolate,” “Brutal Youth,” “National Ransom” and “When I
Was Cruel.” You can just imagine the so-called pulp mysteries of the 1920s,
‘30s and ‘40s bearing identical titles accompanied by lurid, evocative cover
art.
In
“Brutal & Strange,” contemporary masters of crime fiction dig into
Costello’s catalogue for inspiration. The marriage of Costello’s themes and
these award-winning authors’ creativity will seem an inevitable match when you
experience the results. Whether it’s Meg Gardiner and “Complicated Shadows,”
Catriona McPherson and “Tramp the Dirt Down,” Alex Segura and “I Want You” Mark
Billingham and “Our Little Angel” or many other virtuoso interpretations, the
stories match the composer’s high standards and suggest there’s even more
stirring beneath the surface of his songs.
In his “Everyday I Write the Book”—explored here by Gar Anthony Hayward—Costello portrays an author as sinister, controlling and vengeful. That’s not to say the authors who contributed to “Brutal & Strange” are anything of the kind. But you will find their questionable characters engaged in unsavory events. One imagines Costello himself would approve.
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