Charles Ardai
Author of Little Girl Lost
About the Author
Image credit: With wife Naomi Novik at the 2006
Nebula Awards held in New York City, 2007
Copyright © 2007 Ron Hogan
Nebula Awards held in New York City, 2007
Copyright © 2007 Ron Hogan
Series
Works by Charles Ardai
Why I Left Harry's All-Night Hamburgers and Other Stories from Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine (1992) — Editor — 68 copies
Orbit: The Best of Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine (Graphic Science Fiction, No 1) (1990) — Editor — 15 copies, 1 review
Heat Seeker: A Gun Honey Series #2 — Author — 2 copies
Heat Seeker: A Gun Honey Series #4 — Author — 2 copies
Heat Seeker: A Gun Honey Series #3 — Author — 2 copies
Heat Seeker: A Gun Honey Series #1 — Author — 2 copies
A Bar Called Charley’s {short story} 2 copies
The Balancing Man 2 copies
Secret Service 1 copy
Heat Seeker: Combustion 1 1 copy
Cold Reading 1 copy
Gun Honey #1 Sampler 1 copy
My Husband's Wife 1 copy
The Shadow Line 1 copy
Jonas and the Frail 1 copy
Noir Idolatry Blinds the Eye 1 copy
Associated Works
Death Do Us Part: New Stories about Love, Lust, and Murder (2006) — Contributor — 136 copies, 2 reviews
Jewish Noir: Contemporary Tales of Crime and Other Dark Deeds (2015) — Contributor — 49 copies, 1 review
Between the Dark and the Daylight and 27 More of the Best Crime and Mystery Stories of the Year (2009) — Contributor — 43 copies, 1 review
From Sea to Stormy Sea: 17 Stories Inspired by Great American Paintings (2019) — Contributor — 32 copies, 3 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Ardai, Charles
- Other names
- Aleas, Richard
- Birthdate
- 1969-10-25
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Columbia University (1991)
Hunter College High School (1987) - Occupations
- novelist
short story writer
editor
business executive
publisher - Organizations
- Juno (Founder and Chief Executive Officer)
Hard Case Crime (Founder)
D. E. Shaw Group (Managing Director) - Awards and honors
- Summa Cum Laude (1991, Columbia University)
- Relationships
- Novik, Naomi (wife)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- New York, New York, USA
- Places of residence
- New York, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- New York, New York, USA
Members
Reviews
This was a crazy ride.
Our protagonist, Joanna Tan aka Gun Honey, is a specialist in the way that she is capable of infiltrating any area and conceal the gun so it can be used by the person hiring her to execute their own mission.
I have to admit, very interesting concept, something I came across only in one novel where specialist (again woman) helps an interested party to infiltrate a prison to reach his target.
Considering this is pulp fiction, it delivered exactly what I was expecting - show more story worthy of good old action movies. You have everything here, origin story and tragedy, years spent working with guns and infiltrating highly secured areas and of course nefarious crime syndicates and government organizations trying to use Joanna for their own purposes.
Joanna is one busty lady, maybe little bit too busty :), I mean, I thunk that her proportions would be somewhat an obstacle for her line of business when it comes to execution of operations but OK, again this is pulp fiction and Joanna is 100 percent femme fatale, for females and for males :)
Again, comic sticks to its roots and does not try to be what is not. Accent is on the story, action, and whole bunch of twists and turns taking place that will keep the reader interested to the very end.
I am little bit mixed on art side - it is not bad but sometimes perspective and panels seem a little bit disorganized. Art style reminds me of old 70's action comics popular in Europe (Johhny Nero, Barracuda, Steel Claw etc) and I think it would be much, much better in black and white mode than colorized. But again this is my opinion, I generally prefer black and white comics than those in color.
Very interesting story and interesting new heroine to follow.
Recommended to all fans of good old action adventure stories. show less
Our protagonist, Joanna Tan aka Gun Honey, is a specialist in the way that she is capable of infiltrating any area and conceal the gun so it can be used by the person hiring her to execute their own mission.
I have to admit, very interesting concept, something I came across only in one novel where specialist (again woman) helps an interested party to infiltrate a prison to reach his target.
Considering this is pulp fiction, it delivered exactly what I was expecting - show more story worthy of good old action movies. You have everything here, origin story and tragedy, years spent working with guns and infiltrating highly secured areas and of course nefarious crime syndicates and government organizations trying to use Joanna for their own purposes.
Joanna is one busty lady, maybe little bit too busty :), I mean, I thunk that her proportions would be somewhat an obstacle for her line of business when it comes to execution of operations but OK, again this is pulp fiction and Joanna is 100 percent femme fatale, for females and for males :)
Again, comic sticks to its roots and does not try to be what is not. Accent is on the story, action, and whole bunch of twists and turns taking place that will keep the reader interested to the very end.
I am little bit mixed on art side - it is not bad but sometimes perspective and panels seem a little bit disorganized. Art style reminds me of old 70's action comics popular in Europe (Johhny Nero, Barracuda, Steel Claw etc) and I think it would be much, much better in black and white mode than colorized. But again this is my opinion, I generally prefer black and white comics than those in color.
Very interesting story and interesting new heroine to follow.
Recommended to all fans of good old action adventure stories. show less
“It’s called ‘Fifty-to-One.’ Those are the odds, you see . The odds against.”
“Against winning?” Borden said…
“Against surviving,” Nicolazzo said…
I give this 5 stars, not for the plot or even the writing. I give it for the complete ingenuity of the author and what he did with this book! His concept: "to write a 50th book that would commemorate the (fictitious) 50th anniversary of the founding of Hard Case Crime, set 50 years ago, and to tell the story in 50 chapters, with show more each chapter bearing the title of one of our 50 books, in their order of publication." WTF??? And he did it!!! With a lot of crazy book titles to boot!
I mean, if that's not with 5 stars, I don't know what is!!! show less
“Against winning?” Borden said…
“Against surviving,” Nicolazzo said…
I give this 5 stars, not for the plot or even the writing. I give it for the complete ingenuity of the author and what he did with this book! His concept: "to write a 50th book that would commemorate the (fictitious) 50th anniversary of the founding of Hard Case Crime, set 50 years ago, and to tell the story in 50 chapters, with show more each chapter bearing the title of one of our 50 books, in their order of publication." WTF??? And he did it!!! With a lot of crazy book titles to boot!
I mean, if that's not with 5 stars, I don't know what is!!! show less
Happy 20th anniversary to Hard Case Crime – and to me – because founder and author Charles Ardai has released a collection of 20 stories to celebrate Hard Case Crime’s first 20 years. And best of all: he’s written each and every one of them. Not sure what the proper noir word would be, but I’m just going to go with great, terrific, fantastic, amazing.
Not everyone likes short stories. As Ardai notes in the introduction, when people move from reading short stories to novels they show more usually don’t go back. But they should; as readers we forget that a short story isn’t just a skimmed down novel; it has all the elements of a novel, and if done right has power and laser focus. In a novel the author has time to ramble on, let the words lose a little of their impact and then circle back and pick it up again, but with a short story every word counts, you need to get to the point, to stick to the point, to make the point.
This is a collection of stories you’ll want to read right through, they are so compelling. Slow down, though. Don’t rush. Take your time and think about how these words have been put together, how they make a sentence, and how the sentences make these very compelling stories. Appreciate the crisp writing, crackling dialogue (to use one of the author’s words) and almost-can’t-believe-that-happened in every story; it’s apparent every word has been carefully chosen. These stories are edgy and will leave you a little unsettled. The endings are not always explicitly spelled out, there’s no, “And then he died. The end.” You know what happened. Well, you think you know, but maybe . . . maybe. You’re not quite sure. It’s perfect.
According to author Ardai, his stories are inspired by classic noir authors, and he has earned his place among them. Subjects, times, people, places vary but the common thread is complete satisfaction when done reading. The heroes (not sure there are actually any heroes) and villains are sometimes hard to identify. People get what’s coming to them. People try to do good deeds and it backfires. Horribly. Irrevocably.
And if you need a little chuckle in the midst of all your hard-boiled reading, think carefully about the title of the book: maybe natural death comes too late – and might need a little push?? Trust me, you have to read this book. The Hard Case Crime website is a regular stop of mine and I always have something on pre-order. Thanks to the author for providing an advance copy of Death Comes Too Late. My pre-order should also be arriving any minute now. Just one peek at the first story in the book and I had to have it. Plus, I love the way these books look on my shelves, and rereading is as much fun as the first time through. I voluntarily leave this review; all opinions are my own. show less
Not everyone likes short stories. As Ardai notes in the introduction, when people move from reading short stories to novels they show more usually don’t go back. But they should; as readers we forget that a short story isn’t just a skimmed down novel; it has all the elements of a novel, and if done right has power and laser focus. In a novel the author has time to ramble on, let the words lose a little of their impact and then circle back and pick it up again, but with a short story every word counts, you need to get to the point, to stick to the point, to make the point.
This is a collection of stories you’ll want to read right through, they are so compelling. Slow down, though. Don’t rush. Take your time and think about how these words have been put together, how they make a sentence, and how the sentences make these very compelling stories. Appreciate the crisp writing, crackling dialogue (to use one of the author’s words) and almost-can’t-believe-that-happened in every story; it’s apparent every word has been carefully chosen. These stories are edgy and will leave you a little unsettled. The endings are not always explicitly spelled out, there’s no, “And then he died. The end.” You know what happened. Well, you think you know, but maybe . . . maybe. You’re not quite sure. It’s perfect.
According to author Ardai, his stories are inspired by classic noir authors, and he has earned his place among them. Subjects, times, people, places vary but the common thread is complete satisfaction when done reading. The heroes (not sure there are actually any heroes) and villains are sometimes hard to identify. People get what’s coming to them. People try to do good deeds and it backfires. Horribly. Irrevocably.
And if you need a little chuckle in the midst of all your hard-boiled reading, think carefully about the title of the book: maybe natural death comes too late – and might need a little push?? Trust me, you have to read this book. The Hard Case Crime website is a regular stop of mine and I always have something on pre-order. Thanks to the author for providing an advance copy of Death Comes Too Late. My pre-order should also be arriving any minute now. Just one peek at the first story in the book and I had to have it. Plus, I love the way these books look on my shelves, and rereading is as much fun as the first time through. I voluntarily leave this review; all opinions are my own. show less
Private investigator John Blake gets the news that his girlfriend from high school, ten years ago, has been murdered, execution style. He decides he’s got to find out why. And how did she go from a pre-med in college to dancing in a sleazy strip club?
I was pleasantly surprised by this book! I found this on the shelves of our local Dollar Tree store and wasn't sure what to expect. And it's a pretty darn good detective noir! I really liked the imagery of the "...shoddy styrofoam bird in its show more shoddy wooden cage." Very strongly written! A heck of a bang for my $1.09! (that's with taxes)
"This was the accumulated stuff of a life, left out for any scavenger who saw something he liked and for the garbage trucks that would cart away the rest." show less
I was pleasantly surprised by this book! I found this on the shelves of our local Dollar Tree store and wasn't sure what to expect. And it's a pretty darn good detective noir! I really liked the imagery of the "...shoddy styrofoam bird in its show more shoddy wooden cage." Very strongly written! A heck of a bang for my $1.09! (that's with taxes)
"This was the accumulated stuff of a life, left out for any scavenger who saw something he liked and for the garbage trucks that would cart away the rest." show less
Lists
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 59
- Also by
- 21
- Members
- 1,416
- Popularity
- #18,162
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 48
- ISBNs
- 67
- Languages
- 2

















