South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

‘Blacktop Wasteland’ one of year’s best

- By Oline H. Cogdill Oline H. Cogdill can be reached at olinecog@aol.com.

“Blacktop Wasteland” introduces S.A. Cosby — a new talent who delivers one of the year’s strongest novels.

The noir story quickly accelerate­s and doesn’t lose speed until it careens to its finale. It’s a looks at race, responsibi­lity, parenthood and identity via pin-perfect characters with realistic motives. Cosby invests “Blacktop Wasteland” with emotion while delivering a solid thriller.

Set in 2012, “Blacktop Wasteland” revolves around Beauregard “Bug” Montage, a young Black father and husband who owns an auto shop in Shepherd’s Corner, Va. He’s worked hard to create a normal life with his wife, Kia, and their two sons, and sends regular support checks for his teenage daughter from a previous relationsh­ip while trying to distance himself from his past. Bug’s skills as an expert driver made him highly sought by petty criminals and allowed him to skirt the law — few people can catch Bug when he’s behind the wheel. Off-thegrid drag races on back roads now gives him the driving excitement he craves.

Like many people, Bug and his family live paycheck to paycheck, and a storm of financial problems threatens his solid life. His business begins to fail when a new body shop with lower prices opens in town. His cruel, terminally ill mother is about to be kicked out of her nursing home. His daughter is college bound and one son needs glasses. Even the extra cleaning jobs his wife picks up barely make a dent.

Bug feels he has no choice but to take a potentiall­y lucrative job as a getaway driver in a jewelry heist. He doesn’t trust the men planning the heist but believes in his driving skills.

‘Blacktop Wasteland’

By S.A. Cosby. Flatiron, 304 pages, $26.99

As expected, the robbery goes horribly wrong. While Bug and his partners escape, they have more problems. The vicious owners of the jewelry store are after them. Not only is Bug in danger but so is his family.

Cosby smoothly alternates Bug’s domestic life with his criminal side in “Blacktop Wasteland.” There is no question that he is devoted to his family, and is still haunted by being abandoned by his father and subjected to daily taunts by his brutal mother. At his heart, the complicate­d Bug is a good man who will take unsavory actions. Being “without the luxury of options” brings out his criminal tendencies, though he wants more for his children.

The economical­ly strapped area of Virginia with its decaying buildings and “desiccated husks” of deserted houses enhances “Blacktop Wasteland.” The setting becomes a metaphor for Bug’s crumbling life: “A blacktop wasteland haunted by the phantoms of the past.”

“Blacktop Wasteland” will easily make it to many best-of-the-year lists.

S.A. Crosby is the author of “Blacktop Wasteland.”

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