cover image Good Neighbors

Good Neighbors

Ryan David Jahn. Penguin, $15 trade paper (288p) ISBN 978-0-14-311896-1

For his crime novel debut (which won the CWA John Creasy [New Blood] Dagger Award), Jahn fictionalizes the horrific 1964 murder of Kitty Genovese, whose cries for help during a lengthy stabbing assault went unanswered, but the execution falls a bit short of the intriguing concept. When Katrina Marino returns late one night to her Queens apartment complex from her bar job, a man attacks her in the building's courtyard with a knife. Kat's neighbors hear her screams, but no one bothers to call the police, assuming someone else already has. The intersection of the lives of the people who witness the crime will call to mind films such as Crash, but some readers will wish that the author had explored what led to their fatal indifference. The horror of their apathy occasionally comes through%E2%80%94as when one character turns from his window to mix a drink%E2%80%94but given the raw material to work with, the overall impact is less disturbing than it could have been. (June)