Читаем Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. Vol. 38, No. 13, Mid-December 1993 полностью

Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. Vol. 38, No. 13, Mid-December 1993

Don Marshall , Erich Obermayr , Gene KoKayKo , Marty Cann , Peg McLaughlin

Детективы18+

Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. Vol. 38, No. 13, Mid-December 1993


Editor’s Notes

by Cathleen Jordan

Thirty-seven years ago the first issue of AHMM was published, bearing a cover date of December 1956. It was one hundred forty-four pages long, contained eight stories and two “novelettes” (stories of about thirty pages), and cost thirty-five cents. Among the authors in that first issue were Jim Thompson (The Grifters), William F. Nolan (Logan’s Run), and Fletcher Flora (Killing Cousins).

In this thirty-seventh anniversary issue, we have sixteen new stories to present to you, including tales by five authors new to us.

Peg McLaughlin, author of “The Jester’s Foot,” Marty Cann, author of “Outrage at the Short Mystery Club,” and Angela Zeman, author of “The Witch and the Fishmonger’s Wife,” make their fiction debuts in these pages.

Ms. McLaughlin, who temps as a legal secretary and has worked for “(at last count) almost one hundred attorneys,” lives in Washington, D.C., where she learned a good bit about publishing during a stint at a trade magazine. “In my misspent youth, I was a member of the American Puppet Theatre, a group of volunteers who worked at the Library of Congress and spent nights and weekends sewing puppets, painting backdrops and performing our musical show for children in the D.C. area.” She has also written a column for a regional magazine on housing matters.

Marty Cann, now retired, has a column to his credit, too, his on movie trivia for a weekly Long Island paper. He has been an advertising space sales manager, an architectural rep, an overhead door estimator, a print shop owner, and a Long Island Railroad brakeman. A New Yorker who currently lives in Maryland, he has traveled extensively and is an “avid, but terrible, golfer.”

Angela Zeman is the former owner of a business-to-business ad agency in New Jersey. She has also “been a makeup artist, carried newspapers on a rural route, sold mailing machines, run sales seminars for brokers,” and has had a hand in a number of other jobs. “I hold a Dive Master rating in S.C.U.B.A. diving; I won a trophy for trap shooting... I used to love cooking but find I’m turning less domestic the older I get.”

Gene KoKayKo, author of “Late September Dogs,” tells us that he “held many jobs while raising a family and trying to write, from dishwasher to dance instructor to baker to sales rep.” He has published a number of short stories in the fields of espionage, horror, science fiction, and Westerns.

Jan Burke, author of “Why Tonight?” is also the author of (to date) two mystery novels; the second one will be published next year. A number of people have found the opening sentence of her first book, Goodnight, Irene, particularly arresting. She tells us that she began writing the book “after the first line came to me. My husband and I were watching a friend’s band play in an L.A. dive. The line: He loved to watch fat women dance.” Before taking up writing, Ms. Burke “went to work in our family business, making the cutting teeth for oil well and mining drill bits from tungsten carbide. The company was sold to Dresser Industries, and I have been the only woman plant manager in my division... I’m probably the only woman plant manager in the carbide industry.”

Ms. Burke recently resigned her job to spend all her time writing. One reader for sure is President Clinton, who told 48 Hours last March that he was reading Goodnight, Irene.

The Jester’s Foot

by Peg McLaughlin

I was hacking away at the multiflora rose hedge with a pair of debilitated clippers the morning Hal Benson returned to his home on the Cape.

He had junked the vintage Chevy with the scratches on the fins where his kids tested “gold” coins before he caught them at it. Or maybe it had been junked for him, come to think of it. His new set of wheels, a bright yellow VW bug, looked like a rolling halved lemon.

He hobbled down the unpaved track past my clippers and swung into his driveway without a glance my way. I snipped another thorny branch and did a quick mental scamper through my Emily Post. When a man comes home from months of treatment for a nervous breakdown, after a car smash killed his wife and two kids, what’s the neighborly thing to do? Is it too late for casseroles?

I had done the Samaritan bit right after the accident. Forsaking my thesis on Perkin Warbeck, I drove Hal’s sister Claudia out here to Padstow to clear his Cape house of memories. She was convinced the sight of Kelly’s dolls and JoJo’s tennis racket would send him into a tailspin. Neither of us realized then how deep Hal’s well of depression was. I’d nursed a guilty passion for my grandmother’s lanky neighbor in my teens; I suppose that trip was my tribute to a bittersweet memory.

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