I'm a sucker for the genre. Crime/Noir. Jim Houston introduced me to David Corbett at a reading he gave at the Capitola Book Cafe years ago. So, I had always wanted to read one of his books. I'm married to a redhead and I'd read Daniel Woodrell's Tomato Red earlier this year, so,...The Devil's Redhead.
After a whirlwind romance followed in short order by a bust, our protagonist, Danny Abatangelo, comes out of a ten year stint for running weed, unable to deter himself from reconnecting with Shel, the whirlwind he'd had to part with. Shel is tied to a new beau who's a frustrated flunky for a Bay Area crime family made up of hillbilly meth-type characters who are all delicious in their own ways. And we're off to the races.
The book is about 100 pages too long for the thrill ride that it really is. There's so many seemingly detouring lefts, sub-plots, characters and some of them sudden and unexpected, some of them, maybe unnecessary.
There is also a great deal of masterful writing. One section in particular, sustained such a strength of prose that I'm sure it must have been excerpted somewhere, somehow. Chapters 22 and 23 run a gambit of Reservoir Dogs-like power scenes of violence, dips of relief and salvation, back through tension, disgusting gore and then poetic empathy.
"Rendered green and hazy...the figures seemed strangely innocent through the lens, as though their images were projections - not their real selves. Their real selves remained elsewhere, asleep in bed with their alibis." Page 337.
Also, pages 325-333 describing a sort of reverse Stockholm syndrome in which the main female character's captor reveals the strange and desperate love he's formed for her after she's stitched up his bullet torn arm is strong, strong stuff. Overall this thing feels like a solid hit after you're done reading it like it's maybe taken longer than you thought it would but when the swing hits that sweet spot in the bat all your minor complaints just disappear and you can still feel the ball resonating from the connection it's made as it sails out there.