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Sunday, 19 August 2012 11:12
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Rod Davis
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Reviews
A few years ago on an author’s panel at Gemini Ink, I recommended a
new James Lee Burke novel as one of my guilty pleasures. I could see the
rolling eyeballs and upturned noses among some of my colleagues, but
out in the audience there were plenty of approving smiles. No need for
division, though, because in his steady exploration of the flawed and
tormented lives of New Iberia deputy sheriff Dave Robicheaux and wingman
Clete Purcel, Burke has created a compelling, morally complex world
sufficient to absolve any guilt, other than the pleasurable kind.
There’s a good reason our cultural fascination with the Knights of the
Round Table, Robin Hood, black flag pirates, swashbucklers, Japanese
rodin and just about any outlaw-hero imaginable leads to the Bayou Teche
and the hardboiled Big Mon.
Creole Belle is 19th in
the Robicheaux series, including two that became decent-enough movies.
While some of his other character-driven works, such as
Feast Day of Fools,
which uses Texas sheriff Hackberry Holland as the Robicheauxvian
(Robichavian?) protagonist, are also good reads, Burke’s real stuff
comes from the demimonde of southern Louisiana.
The nastiness is as vile as it’s ever been, ignited by the dreamlike
appearance of Tee Jolie Melton, a missing Creole singer who mysteriously
drops in as Dave is hospitalized on morphine with gunshot wounds
(inflicted in
The Neon Rain). His subsequent obsession with
finding her, and then her murdered sister, Blue, pushes the recovering
drunk, ex-New Orleans cop ever deeper into the usual rings of the
Inferno. There he encounters a former Nazi death-camp guard, a wealthy
family of crooked sadists, a remote Gulf island used as a medieval
torture chamber, and corporate coverups directly tied to a devastating
offshore oil-rig blowout. The odds are long, and Dave knows the game is
always rigged:
The people who occupy the underside
of society are dog food. Slumlords, zoning board members on a pad, porn
vendors, and industrial polluters usually skate. Rich men don’t go to
the injection table, and nobody worries when worker ants get stepped on.
Clete plays a bigger role than usual, as the violet-eyed daughter he
lost track of years ago turns up, having toughed out a horrible
childhood by learning to become a freelance assassin frequently employed
by the mob. Clete’s emotional numbness, made even worse by
self-medication and recurring nightmares about his tour in Vietnam —
same as with Dave — turns his efforts to reconnect into a series of
missteps as touching as they are destructive.
Both Clete and
Dave always seem trapped by what Dave’s long-suffering wife, Molly,
calls his “great weakness.” She tells him, “You’re willing to love
people who are corrupt to the core. You turn them into something they’re
not and we pay the price for it.” Dave owns up, but says his mistakes
come from more than a weakness. They are a result of his own
“arrogance.” It’s not a left-handed compliment.
Dave’s twisted
quixotic path intertwines with Clete’s for better and worse, mostly the
latter. Eventually they prevail: shot, battered and barely surviving.
It’s an addictive read, like watching an HBO series that you don’t
really want to end even though you have to excuse some missteps, such as
too-long digressions into 12-step psychology. Dave’s actions and
interactions illuminate his inner demons well enough.
But
narrative nuance isn’t really why readers return to these relentlessly
bleak quests for redemption. It is to bear witness: to human failure,
human weakness, human depravity and human suffering. But also to human
valor, human sacrifice, human triumph. All playing out at 33 rpm on a
scratchy vinyl of good versus evil in 80-percent humidity under
moss-draped cypress. If you don’t believe in good and evil, coexistent,
ever at war within the human spirit, you probably won’t care much for
Burke. He probably doesn’t mind.
Neither does Robicheaux, trying
in the final chapters to make sense of what he, Clete and everyone he
cares about have been put through once again:
Saint Paul said there may be angels
living among us, and this may have been the bunch he was writing about.
If so, I think I have known a few of them. Regardless, it’s a fine thing
to belong to a private club based on rejection and difference. I’ll go a
step further. I believe excoriation is the true measure of our merit.
*****
The depths to which human nature can descend mark another, perhaps less soul-darkening summer read in Ace Atkins’
The Lost Ones,
which marks the return of former Army Ranger Quinn Colson, now a
sheriff in Tibbehah County, Mississippi. Like Burke’s law officers,
Colson is an imperfect man trying to do better in a corrupt world that
can find its way into whatever part of America it chooses. In this case
it’s moving into the South via a Mexican drug cartel with ties to a
murderously abusive baby-peddling racket. One of Colson’s high-school
friends, a Gulf War vet trying to stay alive and sane, becomes the link
to both operations by selling illegal assault weapons to a beautiful
Mexican woman who may or may not be wrong.
While the blues
historian/investigator of Atkins' Nick Travers series may have a more
unique premise, his law-and-disorder platforms’ best licks always come
in a close look at the hard side of the New Deep South, and of the
people who try to make sense of living there:
Lillie and Quinn followed 78 until it
turned into Lamar Avenue in south Memphis, running through all those
warehouses and big-rig garages, cheap motels for truckers to sleep, and
barbecue joints to grab a sandwich, or western-wear shops for some new
cowboy boots. The road soon turned into a clustered section of beauty
parlors and pawnshops, used-car dealerships, and storefront churches.
The Stonewall Jackson Motel was a half mile off the I-240 loop, tired
and haggard and having seen its best days when Ike had been president.
There had been a pool at one point, but it had been filed in, with thick
weeds growing in the center. The motel was one story and a deep U
shape. Lots of transient cars with out-of-state license plates littered
the parking lot, probably laborers cutting through town. The sign
outside the small registration lobby boasted FREE HBO.
This is not the “true grit” of Charles Portis’ famous tale of revenge
in the Old West; rather the mundane grit of disposability that truly
incubates the evils of today, and informs the writers who try to warn us
through tales of morality and mortality. Not that we listen.
Rod Davis is the author of PEN/Southwest award-winning Corina’s Way
and of American Voudou: Journey into a Hidden World
. He taught a course in detective and spy fiction at UT-Austin.Creole Belle, by James Lee Burke, published by Simon & Schuster (2012),
is available here.
The Lost Ones, by Ace Atkins, published by G.P. Putnam’s Sons (2012)
is available here.