Take a roller coaster ride through the gutter in this gripping pull-no-punches thriller from S. Craig Zahler He knows what you'll do - including what you'll sacrifice for protection. Darren Tasking is an entrepreneur whose business is people, and when it comes to people he specializes in risk, pleasure, and fear. He knows what will break you - before you even feel a second of pain. Tasking has everything and everyone, in his orbit, under control. If there's something he wants he will alter your life, elaborately and maliciously, until you yield to his wishes. He knows what makes the Machos tick - and how to keep them in the dark. The police tried to keep Tasking down with their macho modus operandi, sent him away long ago, but they couldn't keep him incarcerated forever. Now he's older, uncommonly careful, and keeps the machos oblivious to his enterprises. But when he meets a dancer named Erin Green at the Cherry Red strip club everything changes. He knows the streets of Great Crown, Florida can only be dominated by the remorseless insights of a relentless slick like him. The brothels and gambling parlors secreted behind iron doors keep the slick autonomous and successful, but Erin proves to be the variable that could put him on a collision course with unrepentant sadists, machos, and a trap created by the slick's own extortionist machinations. The Slanted Gutter is a devastating character study painted with the darkest shades of noir, penned by a hand as unflinching as Tasking's steely-eyed pursuit of his large dollar goal, as unforgiving on the reader as those who seek retribution against the slick for his nocturnal misdeeds. Step into this gutter at your own risk.
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Ok. This is almost definitely my #1 book of the year. Zahler is, I think, my favorite person doing it right now. He's such a riveting storyteller.
I've almost worked my way through his entire public oeuvre (2 books and a comic left) and I think I'm starting to realize exactly what really makes me vibe with his work. It's not the gritty violence, it's not Zahler's provocateur stylings, it's not the modern day exploitation sensibilities (is MAGAxploitation a thing? Because this is definitely that), but something much simpler.
If there's one consistent theme or through-line in his work it's probably systemic violence against characters trying to reach above their station. It's smart, ambitious characters who are too smart and too ambitious for their own good in an unfair world where the status quo refuses to be bucked. Zahler's morally ambiguous (besides Hug Chickenpenny, that boy is a fucking saint) protagonists look above them and want what they see. They see the tactics used by the powerful and use those tactics thinking the same rules apply to everyone. This works out for a time until the world takes notice and the jaws of reality snap shut in a black hole of blind violence sucking in everyone in the vicinity. This reaffirms my view of reality.
Now... Congregation of Jackals or Mean Business on North Ganson Street next?...