CUTTING EDGE: NEW STORIES OF MYSTERY AND CRIME BY WOMEN WRITERS is a noir anthology edited by Joyce Carol Oates. It is a new offering by Akashic Books and has a similar format to its very popular and excellent Noir series. CUTTING EDGE differs in that it tells its ‘stories’ with a “defiantly female, indeed feminist, perspective”.
“Is there a distinctive female noir? Is there, as some have argued, a distinctive female voice, differing essentially from the male voice?” (p.5)
CUTTING EDGE answers that question with (I think) a resounding Yes.
CUTTING EDGE includes a Table of Contents; an Introduction by the editor, Joyce Carol Oates; an About the Contributors Section (which is very interesting).
The anthology is divided into III parts - - - Their Bodies, Ourselves - A Doom of One’s Own - Manslaying. There are 16 stories. One ‘story’ consists of 6 poems by Margaret Atwood.
Contributors include: Livia Llewellyn, S.J. Rozan, Lisa Lim, Lucy Taylor, Edwidge Danticat, Jennifer Morales, Elizabeth McCracken, Bernice L. McFadden, Aimee Bender, Steph Cha, S.A. Solomon, Cassandra Khaw, Valerie Martin, Shelia Kohler, Margaret Atwood, Joyce Carol Oates.
(Note: Lisa Lim is also the illustrator of her story.)
The writing is mesmerizing. It is true noir with an intended female perspective. I was on the edge of my seat reading each story. Some of my own descriptions would include: suspenseful, realistic, terrifying, cruel, sinister, devious, squirm in my seat worthiness, comeuppances, revenge, hysteria, definitely cringe-worthy, scary, disgusting, murder, decapitation, truly evil, chilling, sad, revolting.
Some of my mumbled comments include: “Get ‘Em!”, “This is sickening to read”, “Death always made her hungry”, I can’t really blame Claudia for the murders. Does that make me a murderer and a deranged lunatic, too?”, “ Why does this sh** always happen in trailer parks?”, “I can see Andrew’s soul leaving his body”, “I couldn’t/wouldn’t be that forgiving”, “Wow”, “Hard Life”, “ So pertinent”, “What are we talking about here? - Mermaids?, Fantasy?, Medieval torture?” “I am shivering and there is a fire in the heat stove”.
I didn’t have a favorite story, although “One of these nights” was especially chilling and cold-blooded. They were all noir at its grittiest.
My favorite poem was ‘Update on Werewolves’.
Thank you to Akashic Books for providing me with an ARC (Advance Reading Copy) of this book.