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60 pages, Kindle Edition
First published October 19, 2017
...language is a sleight of hand that both reveals and hides the existence of the unspeakable; that reminds us there are things about ourselves we can never know, that knowing is endless and uncageable, and to understand each other is an approximation of a dream. (p.23)
In crime fiction it is often the villages and small towns that hide a sinister sub-structure of violence and transgression, ringing the cities like refugee camps and harbouring an endless proliferation of terrorists, serial killers, cults, sexual predators and people smugglers. Those who fictionally murder often have no motive except to rejoice in their demonic cleverness. But this is the common daily crime: a man kills a woman, or a man kills her children, or a man kills a woman and her children. Or a man kills a woman and her children and then himself.
The dark and bloody tales of crime fiction, Acker thinks, are just descriptions of the ways we prefer to hide the truth or leave cryptic stupid clues about violence. (p.11)
...all the repetitive tropes of misogynist violence: that to be is to own, that punishment is justice, and if punishment is justice, murder is transcendent justice, the sacrifice of martyrs.
The stalking. The threats. The ongoing terror. How the cops did nothing. And the courts said, The Father. The final text message. Her panicked rush through the suburbs with a yawning chasm tearing open her heart. Flinging open the screen door. Blind in the gloom after the summer street. Then the children's bodies, broken, blood like a plant's shadow. How she noticed everything and can't forget. Every detail. (p.13)