"A Darktide of Westerns" by Mike Baker
A
Darktide of Westerns by
Mike Baker I stopped writing monthly reports on my reading about
the time my wife asked me for a divorce in February of 2024. Having
momentarily forestalled the situation, I kept reading books and writing
reviews but by November, she’d come back undeterred and even more certain
that after 36 years of what I took for wedded bliss, she needed to move on
and that, young readers, finally threw me so hard that most of what I’ve “read”
in December has been on Audible because concentration became a limited
commodity used up by my job and trying to avoid driving my car into oncoming
traffic. That said, I did read a
few books in December. A Wile E. Young book called For a Few Souls More
that sucked and is reviewed elsewhere. Shotgun Marshal by Wade Everett
which also sucked. Ditto the review. I read a couple of Tom Clavin American
West histories, the Audibles I spoke of, that I bought because their 7-hour
reading length matched the out and back I had to drive, heading to how it
seems is the only way for my extended family to reunite: A funeral. A friend described
Clavin’s books as having been researched off of Wikipedia and the History
Channel’s website. That’s being generous. Regardless of his weak scholarship
though, the boy can write and if you don’t mind shallow reportage, they’re
fine introductions to subjects the interested will discover are significantly
more complicated. |
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This brings me to the books worth discussing here: The
Sisters Brothers by Patrick DeWitt and Red Rabbit by Alex Grecian.
I’ve already reviewed
the DeWitt book but I need to describe it for comparison. The Brothers of the
title are infamous killers in the hire of the Commodore, an Oregon Territory
boss, sent to dispatch the Commodore’s enemies into the hereafter. They have
been sent to find a prospector named Hermann Kermit Warm who the Commodore
claims stole from him. They haphazardly wander east towards California having
strange experiences with odd souls and oftentimes, killing or severely
abusing their hapless victims. They are themselves
beset by stupidity, hubris, and cruelty. They are barely loyal to each other.
These adventures occur without building toward the finale which itself feels
haphazard and empty of purpose. The book moves along like a mindless puppy bounding
and stupid or a ball bouncing wherever physics decides. It is like a medieval
journey story—Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales or Homer’s Odyssey—with
less in the way of specific goals. Definitely more like the Canterbury
Tales. Or, as monologuist Jerome Sterne said about lesser journey stories
his students had brought him for his appraisal, the Brothers are “clowns in
space” as they meander from one tragically comic, and seemingly random event,
to the next with the whole of it summing with “What a strange night” or the
more nebulous “wow, dude” whose simple mindedness defeats the history of art
with one ignorant swoosh. You might say, this how
life works, things just happen Baker—you can’t order art with a theory but
that is why we have art. Life is meaningless. The best art orders it, if only
slightly, giving our own real lost moments some kind of perspective that
applies a tiny bit of sense to just some of it. The other fundamental
problem with the book is that it betrays the one rule that sits at the heart
of every good western—there’s someone for whom you want to live. Someone who
stands against the shits and screwheads. An f’ing hero. This book is replete
with villains, scoundrels, and louts—whores, assassins, and fools. These
misbegotten mongrels are all the reasons God made gravity, heart attacks, and
auto-erotica asphyxiation. There is no one rising above their failings to
lead us. There is no one for whom I gave one good goddamn. The writing is fine.
DeWitt is a stylist and for so many pages of me begging for the end, the
ending (after the action’s crescendo) is peculiar in how it satisfies. Saying
more would ruin its fine and gentle catharsis. I’ll likely re-read it at some
point. Alex Grecian’s Red
Rabbit is a meatier proposition. Sadie Grace is the Witch
of Burden County and a few local knuckleheads have put a bounty on her pretty
scalp for reasons best unraveled in the reading. Meanwhile, Rose Nettles—now
called Mullins—is burying her recently deceased husband Joe Mullins under a
sycamore tree. She’s stranded on a farmstead that she can’t maintain and is
without prospects. Grecian delivers upon her two saddle tramps—Ned Hemingway
and Moses Burke—a witch Master named Old Tom and his charge, a child of
uncertain gender that Tom calls Rabbit. Tom’s headed to kill Sadie so Grace
and the cowboys tag along. They are followed by the ghost of Grace’s husband
Joe who doesn’t know much but is pretty certain this is a bad idea. I am a western traditionalist
preferring square jawed, honest, and quiet tough guys, bitter struggles and
godless terrain. And I like both flavors. Patten and Kelton. Sometimes Castle
and occasionally, Elmore Leonard. I’ll read a Piccadilly Cowboy book but I
won’t be excited about having to do it. I do not think Blood Meridian
is God’s gift or even McCarthy’s fifth best book. My point is that I came to
weird or horror westerns accidentally. It’s like that cookbook, Come for
Drinks – Stay for Dinner. I bought Ed Erdelac’s High
Planes Drifter expecting to hate it and came away believing in Erdelac’s
talent and the idea that weaving in the strange and terrible might be the
only way my beloved genre survives. Red Rabbit has all the gore and
violence you expect in a splatter western but with something else. Grecian
loves every character in that book so that even the villain, who is an awful
son of a bitch, invites you into empathizing with his wretched plight. The story meanders but
instead of building toward the meaninglessness that The Sisters Brothers
says is at the root of life, each twist and misadventure drives the motley
crew toward an uncertain but devastating conclusion. And this is where the
book falters slightly. I am one of those rare souls who does not enjoy how
some movies end with tiny “what happens to the character” synopses. I would
much prefer my own imaginings than the author’s well intended slatherings of
hope and resolution. I would say skip it but you might like that sort of
thing. The funny in this cosmic
joke is that I’d recommend both books. It is possible that DeWitt’s Waiting
for Godot like outlook on the why of our lives, sits too uncomfortably in
my heart as I contemplate what a 55 year old man does for his second act. And
Grecian’s book has flaws I have not discussed because they’re academic and
have to do with my own writerly ambitions, my particular tastes in literature
and perhaps, like I just said, I really needed a pat and happy ending to
settle the constant rumbling in my gut these days. It would be without an
understanding of the awfulness of human history that I might say things
couldn’t possibly get worse in 2025 so let’s just say it is my fondest hope
that the tides turn in all our favors as we put December behind us. |
Check out The
Sisters Brothers on Amazon—Kindle edition here and paperback here. Check out Red
Rabbit on Amazon—Kindle edition here and paperback here. |
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