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Black Noir

By: Otto Penzler - editor
Narrated by: Joniece Abbott-Pratt, Sean Crisden
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Publisher's summary

Some of the best-known and most influential pieces of crime fiction have been from African American writers. Be it Walter Mosley's great Detective Easy Rawlins, or the mean streets of Harlem at the hands of Chester Himes, the stories and characters in this anthology have shaped the mystery genre with their own unique viewpoints and styles. Contributors to the collection include Robert Greer, Chester Himes, Walter Mosley, Cary Phillips, Frankie Bailey, and Richard Wright.

©2009 Otto Penzler; Introduction copyright 2009 by Otto Penzler; “Corollary” copyright 1948 by Hughes Allison; “The Canasta Club” copyright 2000 by Eleanor Taylor Bland; “Oprah’s Song” copyright 2009 by Robert Greer; “The First Rule Is” copyright 2009 by Gar Anthony Haywood; “Strictly Business” copyright 1942 by Chester Himes; “Old Boys, Old Girls” copyright 2005 by Edward P. Jones; “Black Dog” copyright 1997 by Walter Mosley; “On Saturday the Siren Sounds at Noon” copyright 1943; renewed in 1969 by Ann Petry; “House of Tears” copyright 2006 by Gary Phillips; revised in 2008; “I’ll Be Doggone” copyright 1998 by Paula L. Woods (P)2021 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books
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Featured Article: Challenging Racial Bias in True Crime Stories


In cases involving Black and Brown victims, the reporting of true crime is its own kind of injustice. Bad things happen to Black and Brown women every day. But no one is talking about the color of their hair and eyes, their job, their education, or how much they are loved by family and community. Discover a growing gamut of podcasts that runs from deep-dive single case investigations to compilations focusing on missing and murdered Black women.

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