It’s
always a pleasure to share a new-to-me author and their writing with you. Today
I’m delighted to tell you about author S. A. Cosby’s latest release, BLACKTOP
WASTELAND.
“The gritty, brutal narrative is
complemented by the author’s sublime use of sensory description and regional
imagery. In addition, the epic, jaw-dropping chase sequences that figure
prominently are reason alone to read this pedal-to-the-metal but profoundly
sorrowful novel. Cosby is definitely a writer to watch. —Publishers Weekly
“We’re in Elmore Leonard land… Bug’s
got a conscience not typical of the thriller genre, but other than that, this
novel recalls almost perfectly the classic heist thriller in the vein of
Richard Stark’s “Parker” novels. It’ll go like hot cakes.” —Library Journal,
starred review
Cosby never misses a note in this
high-energy read, from Bug’s under-the-hood wizardry to the actual driving to
the sensitive character building, which gives depth to the entire cast,
including Bug’s hapless yet treacherous associates. A superb work of crime
fiction, uncompromisingly noir but deeply human, too, much like Lou Berney’s
November Road. —ALA Booklist, starred review
Beauregard
Montage knows how to fix any car—but that would be selling him short. He knows
how to make an ordinary American car something that flies, something that,
under his hands on the wheel, can take its driver places. He came to that
knowledge through heritage, love and the lure of dangerous getaways. But he is
in a town that has no call for those skills.
He’s got
a repair shop that is floundering, a wife and two sons, a daughter from an
earlier time, and the car he inherited from his father, a Plymouth Duster. Late
at night, when he races the car ten miles out from the fairgrounds in the back
road illegal races, he feels most like himself. He feels reconnected to the
part of him that has no part in this other life he knows he needs to live for
the people he loves. It’s always there though, just below the surface, that
desire for one more getaway drive, one more adrenaline boosting race against
the cops.
BLACKTOP
WASTELAND (Flatiron Books/July 14, 2020/$26.99) is about a
diamond heist schemed up by an uneasy alliance of poor men and women. Black and
white, they live in the Virginia Tidewater region in a town where the desire to
be more, have more, leave and live large haunts. With breakneck twists,
heartbreaking intents and the missteps of its indelible characters, S. A. Cosby
weaves a story about black male identity, about what it means to be from the
South and have its history not include your story, and about the pull of family
and its confusing messages about love and inheritance.
Meet the
author:
Author S.A. Cosby |
Sentence
by sentence Cosby pulls you viscerally into the world he’s drawn: you can hear
the whippoorwills when the engines are cut. His characters are richly drawn,
their dialogue sharp, familiar and cadenced with a humor that bites.
Beauregard’s life is a place of bills that are overdue, of kids whose lives you
hope will be better, so you sacrifice. It’s a life where one big reach can burn
the whole place down. This is next generation noir, far from Hollywood’s sheen,
but as close to the spirit of noir in all its dreams and ruins.
This
#ownvoices release has been praised by a wide swath of the best writers working
in the field today (see attached for all that they say)—Lee Child, Dennis
Lehane, Walter Mosley, Jennifer Hillier, Rob Hart, Kellye Garrett, Steve
Cavanagh, Alex Segura and more. S.A. Cosby’s BLACKTOP WASTELAND is
a ride through America’s forgotten South and a stunning literary achievement.
Cosby now
residing in Gloucester, Virginia. His short fiction has appeared in numerous
anthologies and magazines. His short story "The Grass Beneath My Feet"
won the Anthony award for best short story in 2019. He is also the author of My
Darkest Prayer and Brotherhood of the Blade. His writing is
influenced by his experience as a bouncer, construction worker, retail manager
and for six hours a mascot for a major fast food chain inside the world's
hottest costume. When he isn't crafting tales of murder and mayhem, he assists
the dedicated staff at J.K. Redmond Funeral home as a mortician's assistant. He
is an avid hiker and is also known as one hell of a chess player.
Thanks
for stopping by today. Have you ever had that desire of adrenaline to race
cars?
I have less than no interest in racing cars.
ReplyDeleteThis book, on the other hand, is one I HAVE to read. Thank you both.
I downloaded the book last week as I'd read lots of good reviews. Looking forward to reading it.
ReplyDeleteExcellent reviews for this one. I definitely don't want to race cars, but I usually want to go faster than the car in the "fast" lane, ha.
ReplyDeleteI'm not much of a one for cars, but the characters in this one fascinate me, Mason. There's an interesting setting here, too. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDelete