Reviews

Baghdad Noir by Samuel Shimon

mollye1836's review

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3.0

Noir isn’t my favorite genre but it was a real treat to be introduced to contemporary Iraqi writers—I am completely unfamiliar with this nation’s literature. I loved the imagery most of all—what a beautiful country, so rich in history. I especially loved reading about the university students partying by the ancient rivers at night.

remigves's review against another edition

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challenging dark slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? N/A
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

jeankwemoi's review against another edition

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dark informative mysterious medium-paced

4.0

dgrachel's review

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challenging dark emotional mysterious sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

A solid collection of stories, this is one of the better Akashic anthologies I’ve read. There’s a strong sense of place throughout and a strength of character in the face of war and occupation. 

samhouston's review against another edition

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4.0

Baghdad Noir is another short story collection in Akaschic's long series of story collections set in various cities around the world. This time around, the stories all center on Baghdad and its outskirts, and thirteen of the collection's fourteen stories are written by Iraqi authors. As in all short story collections I've ever read, the stories can be a little hit-or-miss depending on the taste of the individual reader, but as a whole, Baghdad Noir is well worth reading.

The stories focus on everything from everyday life to the intrigues and dangers common to war torn cities around the world, and the writers do a good job in capturing the atmosphere within which all their mysteries and crimes take place. One of the more interesting stories, precisely because it focuses on a period seldom captured in fiction today, is set in 1950. That story, "Baghdad House," though, has a bit of a nebulous endings and is not among my favorites, as it turns out.

My favorites are "Jasim's File," a story with a bit of a twist at the end about a man who escapes from a mental institution when the building is hit in during a firefight, and "Baghdad on Borrowed Time," a well crafted story about someone taking revenge on numerous members of Saddam Hussein's brutal regime. I also like the cleverness of the one story in the book by a non-Iraqi, American Roy Scranton, called "Homecoming," another story of revenge and murder - a combination that I can well imagine occurs in Baghdad today way more than anyone would like to think.

tonstantweader's review against another edition

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2.0

Baghdad Noir is the most recent release in the phenomenal Akashic Noir Series of short story anthologies with a noir sensibility. The genius feature is that each edition is edited and written by locals, people intimately knowledgeable of the people and the place that is the focus of each edition in the series. Samuel Shimon, the author of “An Iraqi in Paris” and founder of “Banipal” a respected Arabic literary magazine seems a perfect choice to edit the Baghdad edition.

Baghdad Noir has fourteen stories in four sections called ‘Murder in the Family’, ‘Where is the Trust?’, ‘Wake Me Up,’ and ‘Blood on My Hands.’ It encompasses the time before and during Saddam, during and after the American invasion and includes men and women who currently live in Iraq and others in exile as well as a story by an American soldier. In his introduction, Shimon points out that noir is not a common genre in Arabic literature and he had to explain the concept of commissioning a story and of noir itself, it’s clear he had a hard row to hoe.

There were a few stories I liked. My favorite, to my chagrin, was the one written by the former American soldier, “The Homecoming.” It is the story that most felt like a noir story. There was menace throughout and it was unrelentingly grim. “Post-Traumatic Stress Reality in Qadisiya” and several others struck me more like magical realism. Mainly though what I found off-putting about the stories was the propensity for final paragraph “surprise” revelations. Not that they all surprised, but there was this O’Henry or Guy de Maupassant quality to the stories. I have rows and rows and rows of Akashic Noir books so I dug out the “Queens Noir” book to reread “Alice Fantastic” by Maggie Estep, the story Shimon used as an example for writers who didn’t know noir. It does have a surprise twist, but it works because it’s part of the story’s natural progress. If you look at “The Apartment”, the surprise at the end is motivated by people who were not in the story. That’s not how it’s supposed to work.

This is the first time I have felt disappointed by a book in the Akashic Noir Series and considering the dozens they have published, that pretty amazing. I have read stories from many other cultures with pleasure, so I don’t think my disappointment is rooted in parochialism, particularly since what I find most disappointing is the twist ending from old classic short story writers of the West. Still, it is a useful book to read, not just because we know too little and understand too little about Iraq, some first-person story-telling can only help us all.

I received an e-galley of Baghdad Noir from the publisher through Edelweiss.

Baghdad Noir at Akashic Books
Akashic Noir Series
Samuel Shimon bio in “Banipal”, a magazine he co-founded with Margaret Obank.


https://tonstantweaderreviews.wordpress.com/2018/08/18/baghdad-noir-by-samuel-shimon/
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