2 days ago
- Entertainment
- New York Times
S.A. Cosby on the Appeal of Small-Town Crime Stories
In S.A. Cosby's latest thriller, 'King of Ashes,' a successful and fast-living financial adviser is called suddenly back to the small Virginia hometown he fled, where his family runs the local crematory and his father is in a coma stemming from a car crash that may not be as accidental as it seems.
Cosby himself is from a small Virginia town, and on this week's podcast he discusses the allure of homecoming, the tricky emotional terrain of complicated families and the reason he keeps revisiting the rural South in his fiction.
'Once manufacturing moved out of these places, these rural places, there was nothing left to replace it. But crime — crime is America's great secret industry. It's our great secret empire. And when the 'legitimate' businesses leave, crime steps in the fold. Nature abhors a vacuum, so crime steps in to fill that place. And I wanted to talk about cities like that. … I just wanted to talk about it in a way that I thought was sympathetic to the people that still live there. And also, I think, very honest about the pitfalls of gentrification, but also the incredibly difficult way that poverty can infest your life, especially in a small town.'
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