The Nicotine Chronicles

The Nicotine Chronicles

The Nicotine Chronicles

The Nicotine Chronicles

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Overview

In recent years, nicotine has become as verboten as many hard drugs. The literary styles in this volume are as varied as the moral quandaries herein, and the authors have successfully unleashed their incandescent imaginations on the subject matter, fashioning an immensely addictive collection.

Featuring brand-new stories by:
Lee Child, Joyce Carol Oates, Jonathan Ames, Eric Bogosian, Achy Obejas, Michael Imperioli, Hannah Tinti, Ariel Gore, Bernice L. McFadden, Cara Black, Christopher Sorrentino, David L. Ulin, Jerry Stahl, Lauren Sanders, Peter Kimani, and Robert Arellano.

Inspired by the ongoing international success of the city-based Akashic Noir Series (Brooklyn Noir, Boston Noir, Paris Noir, etc.), Akashic created the Drug Chronicles Series in 2011. Following The Speed Chronicles (William T. Vollmann, Megan Abbott), The Cocaine Chronicles (Lee Child, Laura Lippman), The Heroin Chronicles (Jerry Stahl, Eric Bogosian, Lydia Lunch), and The Marijuana Chronicles (Lee Child, Joyce Carol Oates) comes The Nicotine Chronicles, masterfully curated by blockbuster hit maker Lee Child.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

07/13/2020

The varied latest collection in Akashic’s Drug Chronicles Series (The Marijuana Chronicles) focuses on smoking over the course of 16 stories that see characters battle their demons and set their moral baselines. The most successful entries delve bone-deep into addiction, as characters smoke to smother physical pain, loneliness, and their days. In Child’s “Dying for a Cigarette,” a stubborn screenwriter adds smoking into his script as a way to indicate “a small human weakness,” not realizing his smoke breaks during a lunch with producers allow the Hollywood execs to exploit his own weakness and get their way. Joyce Carol Oates’s “Vaping: A User’s Manual” follows a high school athlete’s account of his vape addiction, which deepens after his mother’s cancer worsens. A cop in Bernice L. McFadden’s “God’s Work” kidnaps girls for a black-market ring run by a priest, all the while judging others based on their smoking habits. Despite the obvious reasons not to smoke, quitting would often be too much of a sacrifice, as a character in Eric Bogosian’s “Smoking Jesus” realizes. Some stories, however, simply employ cigarettes as props, making the collection feel padded. At the high points, these writers capture the mental gymnastics behind the characters’ bad decisions, and the joy such bad decisions can bring. (Sept.)

Booklist

"Typically for Akashic—publisher of the terrific Noir series—the stories approach the subject matter from an impressive number of angles . . . Akashic has yet to produce a dull anthology, and this one is especially good."

From the Publisher

Critical praise for Lee Child:
"Child is one writer who should never be taken for granted."
New York Times
"Child's writing is both propulsive and remarkably error-free, and he's expert at ratcheting up the tension."
Los Angeles Times
"A superb craftsman of suspense."
Entertainment Weekly
"Child is a deliberate stylist and his prose is taut, dynamic, and highly-sprung."
Spectator, "Five Reasons Why the Jack Reacher Novels are Brilliant"
"Wily plotting, swift pacing, mordant wit: Child is one skillful writer."
Kirkus Reviews

Kirkus Reviews

2020-06-17
Sixteen tributes to America’s guiltiest pleasure.

Although editor Child acknowledges that his current collection may be more controversial than his contributions to The Cocaine Chronicles (2005) and The Marijuana Chronicles (2013), his approach to curating these tobacco tales is unapologetic. Cigarettes are above all a bonding experience. They connect a downtrodden motel maid and her employer in Hannah Tinti’s “Park & Play.” Resistance fighters use them to pass messages in Cara Black’s “Spécial Treatment.” They bring a visitor to Havana together with an unexpected kindred spirit in Achy Obejas’s “The Smoke-Free Room.” They help a compromised cop get out of a jam in Robert Arellano’s “Climax, Oregon.” In Peter Kimani’s “Freshly Cut,” they help Wacera, a country girl gone astray, find fellow villagers to lead her home. Child himself shows how smoke breaks can save the day in “Dying for a Cigarette.” But smoking provides solace even to outsiders like the expatriate heroine of Ariel Gore’s “My Simple Plan” and the feisty teenage lead of Lauren Sanders’ “The Summer You Lit Up.” And for the mystic at the heart of Michael Imperioli’s touching “Yasiri,” tobacco is little short of salvation. Even the more smoking-skeptical takes, like Christopher Sorrentino’s “The Renovation of the Just” and Jonathan Ames’ “Deathbed Vigil,” acknowledge tobacco’s allure. Only Joyce Carol Oates comes out foursquare against nicotine in “Vaping: A User’s Manual.”

Even confirmed anti-smokers will find something to savor.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173300966
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 09/15/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
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