Ratings92
Average rating4.3
read for summerween 2023: a book with orange or black on the cover
shawn andre ATE DOWN. s.a. cosby write a karin slaughter plot? nothing could be better literally
Cosby has done it again. This might be his best yet. I am already a huge fan of his characters, his rural Virginia settings, his always powerful choice of dialogue, the situations he puts his people into, but most of all I'm a fan of his almost poetic writing style. The words sing off the page. Just gorgeous, even when violent and full of bloodshed. He is fast becoming my favorite author. This book tackles topics that are both timely and timeless and crime noir lovers everywhere, heads up, this one is chef's kiss.
Engaging, honest and raw would be the best way I can describe this book. I wasn't really super keen on the ending but the rest was so well written that I'm still going to give this one a 5.
By now i know that I will be troubled by Cosby's books, that they will make me uncomfortable. One was a heist novel another was a worst case buddy book, now he goes into Val McDermid territory with a tale of horror. The backdrop is the same but each book is distinct.
This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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We’re going to start with this character, instead of the plot. He makes or breaks your experience with this book more than anything else.
Titus Crown had a long career in the FBI until he retired and came home to take care of his father after a surgery. (or at least that’s what he tells people). An opening in the office of Sheriff presented an opportunity, and Titus was talked into running by many in the community. He’s now the first black Sheriff of Charon County, Virginia. It looks likely that he’ll be the last one for a while, too.
Electing Titus hadn’t initiated a golden era of racial reconciliation. True, minorities weren’t routinely pulled over for little reason, aren’t beaten, and so on—they’re treated fairly under the law. As are white men. Because Titus knows he has to play it straight—if he acted the way some of his supporters wanted him to, he’d be no better than his predecessors—and there’s no way the county government would let him stay in power. But mostly Titus treats everyone the same no matter their race or financial status because that’s the way he’s built. It’s just not in him to do otherwise.
Sadly, for many of the people that voted for him, that means he’s not the first black Sheriff anymore. He’s blue.
He is smart, controlled, and driven. For him, these are both strengths and curses—his life would be easier if those qualities weren’t so strong in him. Then again, he wouldn’t have accomplished almost everything he has otherwise.
When he’s not doing a thankless job that he wonders why he asked for, he’s trying to keep his girlfriend. He knows he’s not good at long-term relationships, but he keeps trying. He wants to be good at them—or at least better.
I feel okay talking about this because it’s in the book description—I wouldn’t have otherwise (and am very glad I can because I don’t know how I’d have danced around it).
On the two-year anniversary of his taking office, Titus’ relaxed morning is interrupted by reports of an active shooter at the high school. In the midst of the chaos he and his deputies encounter when they arrive on the scene, he learns that one teacher has been killed in a targeted attack. They have a brief conversation with the shooter before his deputies open fire and kill him.
Titus has to calm the public, investigate both the shooter and his deputies, and somehow explain to an old friend why his son is dead at the hands of his department. But first…
Until that morning, there’d been two murders in Charon County in the last fifteen years. Following up on something the shooter said, Titus and his deputies stumble onto something that makes the school shooting the least horrible thing imaginable. It turns out that there’d been more than two murders—several more. A serial killer has been active in Charon County for several years.
This is the kind of serial killer that will haunt the dreams of every officer involved in the investigation for the rest of their lives—and more than a few waking hours, as well. There’s the sheer number of victims that happened in this supposedly quiet and peaceful community without anyone noticing. There’s the brutality (a word that somehow feels inadequate) of what was done to the victims. And then they start to learn about the psychology of the killer—and what kind of life must’ve driven him to these killings.
Any of those are likely to leave some scars on Titus and his team—the combination is sure to. And when the killer changes up their modus operandi in reaction to people discovering what they’ve been up to and to discourage Titus? A new level of horror emerges.
On top of all of this are:
All in all, Titus has to wish that he’d never moved back home.
I’m pretty sure I left some stuff off that list—but this book never feels overstuffed.
It’s this kind of book that makes me wish I was a real reviewer instead of a fanboy yelling by bookish yawp across the rooftops of the world. This begs for literary analysis. Sparse, but rich, prose that further disproves the notion that genre can’t be the home of good writing. Cosby tackles hard issues—but really doesn’t try to solve them—he merely puts them on display for readers to acknowledge and wrestle with.
It’s also just a cracking thriller that could be read as shallowly as you want and would keep you white-knuckled and racing to the final confrontation. Tricksy writer that he is, Cosby’s style makes that incredibly easy to do—but if you go that way, you miss the richness of this book.
Cosby’s Blacktop Wasteland blew me away as did this one. I wrote:
From the first paragraph that made me sit up and say “Oh, this explains the hype,” to the devastating last line—and all points in between, Blacktop Wasteland is one of those books that a guy can’t describe without seeming hyperbolic.
All the Sinners Bleed starts off more slowly (although the first few lines are dynamite), and it’s last line hits far differently, but the quality in between is just the same. Cosby’s going to knock you out every time you pick up one of his books, he’s just going to come at you from a different direction than last time.
This is not the beginning of a series—but I wish it was. I’d love to spend years with (many of) these people. Instead, we get to join them for one intense period in their lives and in the dark history of their town. That’s more than enough.*
* Also, more crimes like this in Charon County would be stretching credulity in a way that would be difficult to do with integrity.
Hopefully, I’m not over-hyping this book. My rating is one of the easiest 5 stars I’ve ever given. When I finished this book, I texted a friend that “Well, I really don’t have to read anything else this year, right? What’s going to match this?” Cosby’s talked frequently about the impact that some of Dennis Lehane’s early books made on him—there’s at least one yet-to-be-published crime writer out there who will be talking about All the Sinners Bleed in the same way in the years to come.
Originally posted at irresponsiblereader.com.
God dammit S.A. Cosby knows how to tug at my heartstrings, and his writing??! FUCK this man knows how to write a book
As I was engrossed by Cosby’s previous two novels – “Blacktop Wasteland” and “Razorback Tears,” I was eager to read his newest work. And that it appeared on multiple “Best of…” lists was icing on the cake. Like his other books, it’s a roller coaster from the beginning. In the first 30 pages there’s a school shooting and the exposure of a dark and deeply disturbing video record of murders of children in the Virginia town of the story. Although the crimes in the found footage were described delicately, the subsequent murders were described in quite graphic and far more disturbing ways.
This wasn’t my main problem with the book though. While I liked the main character, the plot didn’t move quickly enough. This was in part because there were many sub-plots, based on “issues of the day” which bloated and bogged down the story. There’s too many to list and, while some were more interesting than others – a southern town grappling with whether to retain its Confederate statues; others weren’t – an old flame returns and leads the main character to question his cooling relationship with the “local woman.”
While not a bad read, it didn’t grip me like his two other novels I mentioned. If you’ve not read either of those, check them out instead of this one
SO GOOD OH MY this one definitely took about 100 pages to get going but i feel like its what it needed to tell the story it was definitely a darker read but it was phenomenal and the writting was so good how it deals with racism especially in the south and religion. its such a powerful thriller and has a message to it. I really enjoyed this one a lot and will definitely read his whole backlist now!
Rounding up to 5⭐️! I really enjoyed this book! The character building was so well done in this one, and the narration was perfectly done. I think my only change would be to have a little more time spent between Titus and the killer toward the end. Other than that, no complains from me!