The Morning Call (Sunday)

Novel has Iglesias on cusp of noir stardom

His exploratio­n of Texas undergroun­d not for faint of heart

- By Simon Romero

At the dawn of the pandemic, Gabino Iglesias had already been living paycheck-to-paycheck in Texas for more than a decade. Then, the public high school where he was teaching had devastatin­g news: He was being let go.

Iglesias, a Puerto Rican novelist, found himself without a salary or health insurance. Unable to find other work in the bleak 2020 job market, he gambled on finishing the book he had started writing on his lunch breaks.

As COVID-19 raged outside, he wrote at a feverish pace for months on “The Devil Takes You Home,” a haunting noir thriller that Mulholland Books recently published. Echoing the Book of Job, it follows a father in Austin who loses his job and health insurance, his young daughter to terrible disease and, finally, his marriage.

At wits’ end, the narrator, Mario, takes up an offer from a meth-addicted friend and embarks on a new line of work as a cartel hit man. This shift spawns a borderland­s odyssey that blends noir and magical realism, meditation­s on religiosit­y and human cruelty, and social commentary on guns, the drug trade and resurgent racism.

“I put all my anger with the health care system into this book,” said Iglesias, 40, the author of “Zero Saints” and “Coyote Songs,” two novels that were critically acclaimed and enthusiast­ically received, albeit by relatively small numbers of readers.

In contrast, the arrival of Iglesias’ new book, with praise pouring in from noir masters, a book tour in the works and film rights already optioned, is shaping into a breakthrou­gh moment for a writer who has long toiled just to make ends meet.

As U.S. health care continues to confound and inflame, Iglesias is tapping into a source of familiar anguish. The book holds parallels to “Breaking Bad,” the series about a cancer-stricken high school teacher who descends into the meth underworld to secure his family’s future. But unlike “Breaking Bad,” which won broad acclaim but faced criticism over the unconvinci­ng ways some Latino characters were depicted, “The Devil Takes You Home” revels in the American West’s ethnic and linguistic diversity.

Some characters speak only English, perplexed by the Spanglish prevailing along much of the border. Others prefer the Spanish of the streets of Ciudad Juarez. Grief-afflicted Mario effortless­ly switches between English, Spanglish, Puerto Rican Spanish and varieties of Mexican Spanish.

Though contextual hints of meaning are ample, most of the book’s non-English dialogue is untranslat­ed and unvarnishe­d, reflecting how millions of people actually talk in Texas, whether in downtown El Paso or the grittier parts of Austin.

“I made it clear we’re not doing italics,” Iglesias said during a recent interview, emphasizin­g his sense of relief when his editor sided with him.

Growing into a writer who navigates languages and cultures wasn’t always in the cards for Iglesias. He was raised speaking only Spanish in Puerto Rico.

As a young reader, he was drawn to authors like Stephen King and Edgar Allan Poe, part of what he called a self-fed “very steady diet of horror.” He said he learned English partly by reading H.P. Lovecraft, dictionary in hand, looking up words he didn’t know.

In Puerto Rico, he was accepted into a marine biology program in college, then switched to get a business degree while working constructi­on to pay the bills. Realizing the business world wasn’t for him, he then “wasted two years in law school,” began dabbling in journalism and got accepted into a postgradua­te journalism program at the University of Texas in Austin.

Iglesias arrived in Texas with $236 to his name and got by without a car for two years. Scrambling to make ends meet on a stipend of about $930 a month, he taught radio reporting to college students, sold life insurance and taught English as a second language.

Even after obtaining a doctorate in journalism, Iglesias said he still nurtured dreams outside academia. More than once, as he pressed on with his own writing, he said colleagues suggested it would be a good marketing decision to change his name to “something with fewer vowels in it.”

Then there are the many sacrifices newly minted scholars make to secure tenured jobs. He saw contempora­ries moving around the country from one college campus to another, churning out ultra-specialize­d work aimed at burnishing their professori­al credential­s.

“I didn’t want to spend my entire life writing articles for journals that no one’s going to read,” he said.

So he focused on his writing while also holding down various gigs, such as producing book reviews, grading papers and teaching online writing classes, to pay the bills. It was enough, he said, to a keep a roof over his family, which includes his 9-year-old son, his wife and a pit bull.

The results of his dedication to his craft are not for the faint of heart. He cited practition­ers of Appalachia­n noir such as David Joy and S.A. Cosby as influences, and said the aim of his work was to “bring it down into the gutter.”

Some scenes in “The Devil Takes You Home” graphicall­y explore how religious fervor can justify just about any course of action. In other stretches, he explores the bloodsoake­d hypocrisy of border security policies that allow guns trafficked from the United States to nurture Mexico’s drug trade.

Then there are the eerie scenes in the smuggling tunnels under the border, where the criaturas live, or the sense of surprise when in the presence of an exceptiona­lly brutal drug lord who speaks with a theologian’s eloquence.

“Being in the presence of monsters is OK, as long as you don’t think too much about what they’re capable of,” Mario says. “The scarier thing is when you realize what you’re capable of yourself.”

 ?? ?? ‘The Devil Takes You Home’
By Gabino Iglesias; Mulholland Books,
320 pages, $28.
‘The Devil Takes You Home’ By Gabino Iglesias; Mulholland Books, 320 pages, $28.
 ?? SARAH KARLAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Author Gabino Iglesias is seen June 22 in Austin, Texas.
SARAH KARLAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Author Gabino Iglesias is seen June 22 in Austin, Texas.

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