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Crime Factory (Single Issues)

Crime Factory: The First Shift

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They broke free from their workstations and ran giggling down the factory hallways, stopping only to scraw crude missives on the walls. Transcribed here for your amusement, the most original voices in crime fiction from around the world offers you 27 tales of revulsion, heartbreak and violence.

Welcome to the First Shift.

292 pages

First published September 11, 2011

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Cameron Ashley

41 books6 followers

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Stephen.
392 reviews6 followers
November 11, 2017
As with most short story collections, some are better than others. It's always nice to read from familiar names like Hilary Davidson, Chris Holm, Kieran Shea, etc. And I forgot how great Scott Wolven is. I need to pick up his short story collection.
Profile Image for Elizabeth A..
320 reviews30 followers
November 21, 2011
The amazing team at Crime Factory Magazine – Keith Rawson, Cameron Ashley, and Jimmy Callaway – have put together an anthology of twenty-seven stories featuring an almost embarrassingly rich bounty of talent.

Of course it would be unwieldy for me to review all twenty-seven stories, not to mention take the fun out of you discovering some of them on your own, so here are just a few of the ones that were highlights for me…

“Glory B.” by Josh Converse – Ever wondered how robbery crews get together? I mean, do you have to be friends for life, or do you just answer an ad on Craigslist or something? Converse’s taut tale takes a snapshot look at the process through which potential getaway driver Quinn auditions for a robbery crew’s boss. Quinn has three attempts to impress with his driving skills and get a mock getaway right. Screw any one of them up and Quinn not only won’t be driving the getaway, he won’t be driving anymore period.

“Microprimus Volatitus” by Greg Bardsley - You will either find this to be wickedly funny or bizarrely offensive. The story involves a love triangle. Randy begins dating Razelle, at first not aware that she’s been living with Helmut for four years. And though she thinks of Helmut as just a roommate, Helmut is passionately in love with Razelle, which of course causes an intense conflict when Randy hits the scene. Oh, did I mention Helmut is a tiny little monkey the size of a canary? Yeah. And he’s determined to do whatever it takes to get Randy out of the picture, including going to war. I found the story wickedly funny; I’m just weird that way.

“The Method” by Chad Eagleton - Terrence Bledsoe, a “fixer” for the rich and famous (kinda like “The Wolf” from Pulp Fiction), receives a call to help sweep things under the rug when an actress who already has legal and P.R. problems gets in a car accident out in the desert one night. It doesn’t help matters that she’s on her way home after visiting her boyfriend, an A-List Hollywood star. When he arrives, however, Bledsoe’s not convinced things went down the way he was told… who’s really doing the acting, and what’s really getting fixed?

“The Ravine” by Steve Weddle – I know I probably shouldn’t admit to having a favorite, but I can’t help it; “The Ravine” absolutely knocked my socks off. Roy Alison’s road in life has been more than a little bumpy. Drug addiction, a car accident involving fatalities, a bar fight gone wrong, a stint or two in prison. He’s been through a lot in his thirtyish years. We meet him working as a drone for Caldwell Parish, acting as a process server of sorts delivering notices to residents about violations of the municipal code. Having worked hard to overcome “the darkness” in himself, Roy comes face to face with a man with a shotgun determined to test Roy’s resolve to stay on the straight and narrow. Author Steve Weddle does with character development in “The Ravine” in 7 pages what a great many authors can’t do in an entire book. Simply brilliant writing.

“Green” by Chris F. Holm - Stoners aren’t the sharpest tools in the shed, let’s just get that out of the way. They do, however, make for a highly entertaining story in this offering from Holm, especially when their stoner logic determines that ripping off a greenhouse out in the country is the most efficient way to replenish their stash. After all, how hard could it be to bust the glass out of a greenhouse and rob from a hippie with a grow license? Plenty hard it turns out, as what starts off as an amusing misadventure goes horribly off the rails.

Featuring stories from established authors and hungry up-and-comers alike, Crime Factory: The First Shift absolutely sizzles from start to finish.

The complete lineup includes stories from: Dennis Tafoya, Andrew Nette, Jedidiah Ayres, Roger Smith, Josh Coverse, Charlie Stella, Greg Bardsley, Hilary Davidson, Kieran Shea, Nate Flexer, Cameron Ashley, Patti Abbot, Chad Eagleton, Ken Bruen, Jimmy Callaway, Dave Zeltserman, Steve Weddle, Craig McDonald, Keith Rawson, Leigh Redhead, Anonymous-9, Jonathan Woods, Liam Jose, Dave White, Chris F. Holm, Frank Bill, Adrian McKinty, and Scott Wolven
Profile Image for Karen.
1,970 reviews107 followers
September 18, 2012
Right, here it is. I want more short story collections.

There aren't enough thriller / crime fiction short story collections being published.

I don't care if I'm not a "normal reader" or if they aren't very popular or whatever other weasel words you want to chuck around. I LIKE short story collections.

Part of the reason I like them is because they give a reader a chance to find new authors with storytelling styles that appeal, or even to revisit favourite authors.

They work regardless of whether there is a theme, or they are simply a collection of the editor's favourites.

Plus, perfectly formed short story writing is tricky, and there are some excellent examples of the art in THE FIRST SHIFT which were seriously clever.

Some may not appeal so much to some readers, and there were a few in here that weren't exactly my cup of tea - but that's the point. Gave me a really good chance to have a little wander around in some writing from authors I might not necessarily have sought out.

But that's the whole point of a short story collection - you get to dip your toe into a whole lot of deep, shallow, rough, smooth and lovely ripply ponds.

THE FIRST SHIFT is a good combination of the hard and soft, tough and softer, clever and not so appealing.

Want more short story collections like it.

Want them now please.

http://www.austcrimefiction.org/revie...
Profile Image for A Reader's Heaven.
1,592 reviews28 followers
August 21, 2014
A reasonable collection of crime short stories by some of the best up-and-coming authors in the business.

For my reading tastes, this collection was just a little up and down for what I like. Some very good stories here - a few not so good, in my opinion.


Paul
ARH
Profile Image for Laura.
Author 35 books423 followers
June 25, 2012
The stories in this collection shame the hell out of me. I'm just going to quit writing, now!
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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