Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Dark deeds in plain sight

EVERYTHING UNDER THE SUN IN ‘PALM SPRINGS NOIR’ COLLECTION

- BY MARGARET WAPPLER

LIKE THE rest of Southern California, Palm Springs is built on a precarious relationsh­ip with water. Without the aquifer underneath the Coachella Valley, the expensive landscapin­g, midcentury modern hotels and hungover tourists wouldn’t survive. Water tells the lie that everything is fine in the desert cities and forever will be, no matter what the dust whispers at 2 a.m.

“Palm Springs Noir,” the latest anthology in the long-running Noir series from Akashic Books, is listening to the dust. And beware: As collection editor Barbara DeMarco-Barrett points out in her introducti­on, that whisper of dust can become a blinding storm.

Contrary to popular belief, noir doesn’t require a bleak city street for its setting. Nor water, for that matter. Noir thrives on secrets, lies and lust, all flowing plentifull­y through the jewel in the Coachella Valley’s fragile crown. In these 14 stories from writers who either live in or have ties to the area, including Janet Fitch, Alex Espinoza, T. Jefferson Parker and J.D. Horn, money, drugs, sex or freedom are all objects of desire. Sometimes, as in Horn’s clever story “The Stand-In,” the lies themselves are the most coveted prize.

“Palm Springs Noir” leaves the sliding glass door open for ghosts present as well as past. One of the original peoples of Southern California, the Cahuilla, are nodded to in Eduardo Santiago’s wistful and funny “The Ankle of Anza,” which follows an addict-turned-cat burglar fresh from another failed stint at Betty Ford. In Fitch’s entertaini­ng “Sunrise,” the narrator’s life was so ruptured by a con man that she considers herself the walking dead. Only a chance at revenge gets her blood pumping again. In Eric Beetner’s cautionary tale, “The Guest,” one of a few that touch on the lifeblood of Palm Springs’ Airbnb economy, a dead body turns up in a pool, an accidental death that prompts haunting and murder.

Any city that worships Elizabeth Taylor’s Big Caftan Energy and the Rat Pack at their smarmiest (Sinatra shows up several times, maybe too much, in these stories) has a healthy relationsh­ip with camp, and “Palm Springs Noir” follows suit. Tod Goldberg’s memorable contributi­on, “A Career Spent Disappoint­ing People,” about a partnershi­p gone sour between two wedding DJ-singers, embraces a weird clown and a trunkful of body parts. By far the collection’s campiest note is hit by Michael Craft in the delightful “VIP CheckIn.” When a wheelchair­using sugar daddy is screaming for “pink fluff,” his name for boozesoake­d raspberry trifle, one can practicall­y see John Waters in the background clapping with glee.

In Los Angeles, the rich don’t know the names of their pool “boys,” but in Palm Springs those men have a past, a motive and a weapon — the pool itself. The well-off and the working class sometimes form a tenuous alliance, as in DeMarco-Barrett’s “The Water Holds You Still.” Several characters are trying their best, or worst, to exit the ranks of the working poor.

One of the most powerful lessons in how hard this transforma­tion can be comes in Chris J. Bahnsen’s “Octagon Girl.” The titular woman is an MMA card girl who takes up with a fighter in hopes of giving her son a father figure. Needless to say, it doesn’t work out that way, and Bahnsen captures the desperatio­n of a woman who wants to know her mind — but doesn’t.

The outlaw and the outcast have always found a home among the yucca and cholla in the desert sprawl of Palm Springs. Rob Roberge’s story, “The Expendable­s,” based in the desolate and ironically named Wonder Valley, tracks a scientist who was both victim and perpetrato­r of MK-ULTRA, one of the CIA-led mind control experiment­s meant to combat communism. “If people knew the truth about the scope of this shadow world,” he writes of the government-sponsored torture, “they would realize what a fragile endeavor society actually is.”

The desert provides cover for far more than lizards and jackrabbit­s. In the book’s final piece, Espinoza’s “The Salt Calls Us Back,” a cult — but don’t call them that to their faces — takes the ruined Salton Sea as its base.

The collection’s creepiest story ends with a heinous sacrifice — effectivel­y a closing statement: For all the playfulnes­s of the genre and the location, the wisecracks and the kidney-shaped pools, there is an unmanageab­le darkness waiting to seep in, like so much blood in the pool water.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? A DUSTY haze fills the air at sunrise in Palm Springs.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times A DUSTY haze fills the air at sunrise in Palm Springs.

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