This
 novel has been on my radar for a while. Somewhere along the line author
 Shawn Cosby and I connected on Facebook. I kept seeing people saying 
positive things, The blurb from Mystic River author calling Cosby a 
fresh new voice in Crime had my interest. I know Lee Child is a big deal
 but I was more impressed by Walter Mosley. As these huge names kept 
telling how good the book was I just couldn’t resist. So in the time 
when I was waiting for the book to arrive then we heard from uncle 
Steve. 
There are few seals of approval in the world of 
publishing like getting love from Stephen King who said of this novel “I
 loved BLACKTOP WASTELAND, by S.A. Cosby. The epigram tells you all you 
need to know about this fast-paced, bare-knuckle thriller: “Drive it 
like you stole it.”
Then as I sat down to read this book I had the 
nagging thought. How the hell is this book going to live up to the hype.
 Sometimes I think it is best to push all those thoughts out of your 
head when you start a book. I never read the cover flap so I went into 
the novel totally cold on what it was about. I have no idea what I 
expected. 
I can say this is a wonderfully simple and perfect 
crime noir set in the south that is driven by strong well-developed 
characters. There is nothing exactly groundbreaking or earth-shattering,
 but it doesn’t have to be that. It is a fun, exciting, and entertaining
 noir. The strongest aspect of this novel is the confident and clear 
voice that Cosby writes with. 
Blacktop Wasteland is a novel 
about Beauregard "Bug" Montage. He is a monster behind the wheel of a 
car, and used to drive for intense robbery jobs. He has tried to go 
straight, married with two kids, and is running a garage with his best 
friend. Money becomes an issue when his mother is set to lose her space 
in her nursing home, and his oldest daughter needs money for college. So
 it is imperfect timing when a gig stealing diamonds fall into his lap. 
The problem is the loser Ronnie who brings him the job is dangerous and 
his wife Kia is afraid for him.
There are tons of action and 
violence in this story but the book would not work at all if not for how
 strong the characters were from top to bottom. Bug is a character who 
you feel bad for when things get out of control. Thankfully and 
refreshingly Bug feels the weight of his actions when things go bad, 
very bad.
Bug is capable, and that makes the action fun to watch.
 The characters are like objects seconds from impact in a crash. You 
know it is falling apart but you can’t look away. The attention to 
detail in the characters is a strength Cosby brings to almost every 
page, that is what compels the page-turning, not the chases. 
Also,
 I wanted to point to the dialogue for a moment. Crime fiction almost 
always hinges in serious ways on how the characters interact and talk. 
The giants of crime know this, Elmore Leonard and Tarantino are obvious 
examples. Cosby has good dialogue, although oddly the best example of 
this was the scenes in the nursing home. That shit felt real. 
This
 is a fantastic noir and here is the amazing thing. It is his first 
novel so as good as it was Cosby still has room to grow. I expect that 
to happen in tighter dialogue and bigger scope. That said I loved every 
page of this one and think crime readers would be stoked to be ahead of 
the curve.
I say that because John Legend bought the film rights and 
hired the Academy award-nominated screenwriter of Mudbound Virgil 
Williams to adapt it. Be ahead of the curve and read this now.
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Book Review: Blacktop Wasetland by S.A.Cosby
Blacktop Wasetland by S.A.Cosby
Hardcover, 285 pages
      
            Published
        July 14th 2020
         by Flatiron Books
      
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