Ed Brubaker is a great and inventive writer, with plenty of ideas, reciprocating with his partner in illustration, Sean Phillips. Their best work is in the Criminal series, but they stretch out here and in Houses of the Unholy and To Kill or Be Killed, into mashups connecting crime to the supernatural. This one was my first foray into this arena with them and it felt off to me, initially, but now I've read the other works, and have plenty more reading in the past couple years into the femme fatale in crime fiction, and in my rereading of the short series, I like it more and more.
Brubaker never takes a character or concept and accepts it at face value and just runs with it. He always turns it inside out, looks at it from a variety of ways and explores it a bit. So we know these women are around for centuries, probably demons, and we typically know them as just Bad. Brigid O'Shaughnessy in the Maltese Falcon is a classic example, a woman that can't tell the truth to save her soul. But in Fatale, Brubaker deconstructs the femme fatale trope. He has our femme fatale, Josephine, wonder why it is guys are so stupid as to fall for her; the blame is shifted from the woman to the men. And she wants out of this scheme, she feels bad for the other women she hurts in the process.
In this volume, The Devil's Business, we continue the story of a man, Nicholas, who lost his leg and his family to Josephine, who he thinks he saw in a photograph with his Uncle Dominic, decades ago. But the Jo we meet here has become a recluse, in this story he discovers about another victim, Miles.
This volume shifts the thirties/forties femme fatale trope to the seventies, and brings in an evil devil-worshipping cult like the Helter Skelter/Manson family featuring sex, drugs and murder. It's wild, and ends with Nick in jail. . . the best place NOT to see Josephine!