Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Paintings color stories in ‘From Sea to Stormy Sea’

- By Ann Levin

Writers take their inspiratio­n from a variety of sources: an unforgetta­ble face, overheard conversati­on or, perhaps, a painting.

The well-known crime writer Lawrence Block has parlayed that last scenario into two volumes of short stories, the first inspired by works of Edward Hopper and the second by favorite paintings of his authors.

Now he has come out with a third, “From Sea to Stormy Sea,” an anthology of 17 stories that riff exclusivel­y on American paintings, from Robert Henri’s portrait of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney to Andy Warhol’s mural for the 1964 World’s Fair, “Thirteen Most Wanted Men,” and Mark Rothko’s shimmering “Number 14.”

Since the writers he’s chosen tend to specialize in crime and genre fiction, the stories are chock-full of loners, losers and cynics who get to say snappy lines such as “Sex. Religion. Dining out. Sooner or later, some human being is going to make you regret participat­ing in any or all of the above.” (Spoken by the enterprisi­ng heroine of Jan Burke’s “Superficia­l Injuries.”)

One of the very best

is “Baptism in Kansas” by detective writer Sara Paretsky, who uses the 1928 John Steuart Curry painting of the same name to conjure up a vivid portrait of the hardscrabb­le lives of white farmers in Kansas in the early 1900s, their religious revivals, as depicted in the artwork, and racist campaigns to get rid of the Native American population.

Other standouts include “The Man From Hard Rock Mountain,” a postapocal­yptic fantasy by Jerome Charyn based on the eerie Rockwell Kent engraving “Twilight of Man” and the deliciousl­y noir “On Little Terry Road” by Tom

Franklin and “Get Him” by Micah Nathan, inspired by paintings of the lesserknow­n artists John Hull and Daniel Morper.

Not all the stories work, but enough do to make it worth it. Admirers of Winslow Homer’s stormy seascapes will probably enjoy Brendan DuBois’ “Adrift off the Diamond

Shoals,” which pivots on a writer seeking revenge on a sleazy real estate developer who wants to knock down his family’s modest house on North Carolina’s Outer Banks to put up a “capitalist castle.”

Then there’s the nasty little confection “Garnets” by crime writer Christa Faust, who has moonlighte­d as a profession­al dominatrix. It’s a chilling tale of a chance meeting between two women who give new meaning to the term “femme fatale.” Her inspiratio­n is Helen Frankentha­ler’s “Adirondack­s,” whose swirls of red paint could make you think of a brilliant sunset — or a bloody corpse.

 ??  ?? “From Sea to Stormy Sea” Edited by Lawrence Block (Pegasus Books, $26.95)
“From Sea to Stormy Sea” Edited by Lawrence Block (Pegasus Books, $26.95)

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