The Silverberg business

Robert Freeman Wexler

Book - 2022

"In 1888 in Victoria, Texas, for a simple job, a Chicago private eye gets caught up in much darker affairs and ends up in the poker game to end all poker games"--

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SCIENCE FICTION/Wexler Robert
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Subjects
Genres
Paranormal fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
Easthampton, MA : Small Beer Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Robert Freeman Wexler (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
269 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781618732019
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Shannon isn't planning to become embroiled in a case while visiting his family in Galveston, but when his old rabbi asks him to look into a group of men who might be swindling Jewish refugees, he can't say no. He finds himself in the town of Victoria, seeking a man named Silverberg who disappeared in the company of the swindlers--and followed by a man with white hair who smells like sea rot and whose gaze freezes people in their tracks. In his quest to take the man down, he'll discover an eldritch horror lurking at the edges of the Gulf--hungry mouths carved into the sand, men with skull heads, doors that shouldn't exist, air that turns to brackish, suffocating water. Concussed and shaken by the uncanny, Shannon is determined to use his sharp gambling instincts to solve this mystery. In this effective, creeping, weird-western novel, time slips, hands fold, and something ancient brews. Wexler refuses to give the reader all of the answers, instead leaving them with a slight, satisfying shiver and visions of stormy seas.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Steeped in the early history of Texas's statehood and laced with eerie portents of supernatural horror, the outstanding latest from Wexler (The Painting and the City) impresses with its originality and inventiveness. In 1888, a Jewish private detective who goes by the name of Shannon travels from Chicago to Victoria, Tex., to investigate the disappearance of New Yorker Nathan Silverberg, who was sent with donor funds to buy land on the Texas coast for a settlement of Romanian Jewish refugees. Shannon discovers that Silverberg was first swindled, then murdered by a pair of con men, one of whom--a gambler named Stephens--wears an ornate ring with magic powers. When Shannon pursues Stephens, the ring's magic transports him to an otherworldly "scratch land" populated by skull-headed beings whose rituals--involving card games and strange dancing--shape a cosmic context for catastrophic events that unfold in the human world. Wexler keeps his twisty plot refreshingly unpredictable and endows his characters--even the non-talking skullheads--with vividly realized personalities that enliven his surreal, atmospheric tale. This weird western packs a wallop. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In 1888, a Jewish PI from Chicago who goes by the name Shannon is hired to find Nathan Silverberg, a missing developer behind the creation of a Texas colony for Romanian Jewish refugees. Shannon quickly discovers that Silverberg was swindled out of his money and murdered, but tracking down the killers, including a gambler with white hair and red eyes named Stephens, proves an epic undertaking. With his special onyx ring, Stephens sends the detective off into a bizarro alternate world where people with skull heads and "tonguelets" flit around and play epic games of poker. Shannon, who gets hit in the head a lot, has difficulty enough separating dreams from reality, but he's hardly prepared for the scenarios that unfold in this dimension. They include his seduction by a scantily clad skullhead called "the saloon girl." Ultimately, his success at poker will determine not only his own survival, but also that of people in the "actual" world faced with sandstorms "powerful enough to sink a civilization." As in real life, the book's setting of Indianola was twice destroyed by hurricanes in the late 1800s. Other aspects of the book are drawn from Texas history by Wexler, a relaxed surrealist who is less interested in big, scary effects than subtle underpinnings and intellectual concepts--"determinism in modern thought," for example. Ultimately, the Jewish component is underdeveloped and Wexler's "inside" narrative game can bog down for stretches. But any book with a guitar-playing sheriff, an ex-con named Slack-Face Jake, and a giant in a bowler hat is worth a spin. A weird but oddly convincing creature feature. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

An excerpt from Chapter 1 of The Silverberg BusinessThe BusinessI woke from another of those swimming on land dreams. Those are the ones where I'm on my way to wherever I have to be until somehow...I can't remember how to walk. I sink to my knees, shuffle along like that for a while. Then I'm on my stomach. I squirm, crawl, try to crawl--anything to keep moving, flopping on grass or pavement. Eventually, I stop trying. At least it hadn't been the other kind of dream, the chasing dream, where I'm after someone, or someone is after me--or some Thing, some creature, and it's almost on me. I can't shoot my gun--no, that's not it: shooting is complicated. No trigger--I have to scream the bullets out, but miss or have no effect. They don't stop what's after me. I always wake up yelling. Embarrassing when you're not alone.The morning sun banged against the windowpane. I had gone to sleep without closing the curtains. Not that they would have helped much. I rolled away from the glare, but sleep wouldn't return. I looked around, working to recall where I was. Floral wallpaper, chipped washbasin--the room I took last night in the Delmonico Hotel, Victoria, Texas.I got out of bed, bent over the washbasin to splash my face, pissed in the pot, and put on my clothes, ending with a brown cotton sack-coat to cover the Bulldog revolver in its shoulder harness. I carried my hat, a brown derby, down to the hotel's restaurant. From the doorway, I studied the room--one quick glance--as I've done in many rooms for the last ten years. Single diner, man, dressed for town, dark vest over white shirt with detachable collar. He wasn't heavy and he wasn't thin. The shirt looked new.I didn't need to examine him, or anyone in the hotel, but that's what I do. Studying a room is a practice I can't stop. Because there are times when doing it keeps me alive.The waitress was small, with dark hair and a smile that told me nothing except that she was awake and doing what she needed to do. Which at this moment was to take me to a table. As I passed the man we exchanged nods. The waitress sat me near a window; I watched the flow of pedestrians: an old man covered in soot, a smiling young redheaded woman with a man who had the weathered face of a rancher, a stout woman and two children.A man glanced in; he wasn't old, but his eyebrows and hair were bone-white. His rusted eyes stared into mine--I froze, helpless, unable to act, unable to save myself...a wave crashed the shore, then another, waves that towered, that smote the sand with unknowable force. I tried to run, couldn't, tried to crawl, couldn't. The hammer of wave crushed my shell...millions of tiny crystal shards mixed with spray-clouded air. Daylight faded. The spent wave departed, leaving sand sculpted into fantastic whorls and ridges, and...a stench...rot...the kind of rot you get after a storm passes and the sun bakes whatever the waves dredged from the depths.Another scent came to me...earthy, earthy and pleasing--my hand touched warmth. A mug. The blessed waitress had brought coffee. I drank. Unease receded, waves subsided to harmless foam. The dining room was clean and dry. Outside the windows, sunshine and no white-haired man.I drank more coffee. Stupidity began to lift. The waitress returned to refill my cup and take my order. My stomach reminded me that yesterday I had eaten little. I hadn't meant to drink whiskey, not so much anyway. The problem was Galveston--childhood home left long ago. I had been there for a cousin's wedding, also attended by ghosts from the past, particularly one in a green dress. Seeing her had made me wistful, made me reflect on my life in Chicago, the crime investigations and frequent travel to towns where people often resented my presence. She looked happy enough with her husband and three children. To her, my life no doubt appeared adventuresome. Which enforced her belief that she had made the correct decision--women may have romantic notions about adventure, but they choose domestic stability. I can't blame her for being sensible.The waitress had also brought the local paper, Victoria Advocate, dated Saturday, October 27, 1888. Today was Monday the 29th. I perused the section called "The Outside World, An Interesting Jumble of Both Foreign and Domestic News for Victoria Readers," in which I discovered that the champion boxer John L. Sullivan, at twenty-nine years of age, has made and spent $300,000 in the last three years but is now broke and incapable of fighting; the many dog farms of frozen Manchuria provide us with splendid fur to make our coats, and:L. Herman, a New York money changer and banker, has disappeared with $5,000 belonging to Polish Jews. The money had been entrusted to his care and was to have been sent to England.That last item...I had been hired to investigate a similar crime. Sometimes, fraud is so apparent yet unrecognized that the intelligence of the whole of humanity becomes questionable. And yet, humanity somehow continues to advance, inventing and creating, as if there's a wall between intelligence and gullibility, so that no matter how educated or experienced a man might be, there's a fraud to which he will fall victim. By that logic, I would have to be included as one of the eventually gullible, but I haven't fallen yet. Unless I was so unaware that I didn't recognize it at the time and still don't.This is the thinking that keeps a detective awake at night.I ate my eggs and beef and flapjacks. The other man, his breakfast over, lingered to roll a smoke. A family entered, a man and woman accompanied by miniature versions of themselves.The fraud that brought me to Victoria involved a group calling themselves the Romania-America Relocation Movement. They solicited donations from East Coast Jews to pay for moving Romanian Jews to a new colony on the Texas coast. Money accumulated in an account in New York. Nathan Silverberg, the representative who had met with donors, was sent by train to Victoria, carrying a bank draft. On arrival, Silverberg was to open an account at Sibley and Sons Bank, then look at property with local representatives and purchase land for the colony.The settlement was a sham. My job was to find Silverberg and the money. Silverberg was a well-known and respected member of the Jewish community in New York. Which didn't mean he wasn't part of the swindle, but it was more likely that the swindlers had used him as a way to get the money. Either way, I would have to find him.My client was Rabbi Henry Cohen, of Galveston. I met him at the wedding and agreed to the job. I had things I wanted to get back to in Chicago, but I didn't think this Silverberg business would take me long.Breakfast over, I got up, leaving the newspaper for the next diner. I set the derby on my head and went outside. Steady rainfall had accompanied my train, and the morning sun steamed the puddled residue. I can't say I enjoy Chicago winter, but I do like a pleasant autumn. I like that there is an autumn. Growing up on the Gulf, I hadn't known such a thing existed.I crossed the street, avoiding puddles and the swarm of horses and wagons. Victoria's population, I've been told, is approaching 4,000, but it still has the feel of a frontier town. Seeing the sign for a barber's, I stopped and went in for a shave and a moustache trim. Next stop was Sibley and Sons, partway down the next block. I entered and approached the clerk, a thin man with gray eyes and beard, and gave him my Llewelyn Detective Agency card."I sent a telegram that I would be coming," I said."You sure don't look Irish, Mr. Shannon," he said. He went to find the manager.I've been told I don't look Jewish either. No doubt some people can see the secret marks on my forehead, but most take me as a regular American. I don't feel like one; I doubt Jews will ever feel they belong with the regular Americans. No matter how much freedom there may be here, compared to most of Europe, someone will eventually come along to force us back into our ghetto.The family name was Chanun. Changed for convenience by the bilge rats in charge of immigration when my grandparents arrived in New York. Excerpted from The Silverberg Business by Robert Freeman Wexler All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.