If reading Ernest Hemingway makes you wish he hadn’t shot the great American novel, if your only complaint about Graham Greene is that he didn’t leave an heir to the epic international thriller, if you’re still backing Malcolm Lowry in his race to grace because contemporary literature challenges you less than a walk in the park, then read David Corbett. Do They Know I’m Running?, whether you like it or love it, will bring you up to speed on just how much a single novel can still change your life.

This is the story of what happens when we go to war, see part of our humanity die, and then wish with all the heart we have left that there was some other way home. Told from multiple points of view and at a pace that gives us no time to applaud ourselves as we watch and weep, something unique sets this novel apart from the demagogy that so often taints the debate on immigration politics, human trafficking, gang warfare, and our Pyrrhic ‘war on terror’. Corbett writes with such unflinching honesty that we have to forgive him the loss of our innocence as Roque Montalvo, Latino Holden Caulfield of the 21st century, fights the law; both that of the land and that of unintended consequences.

Entrapped by a conflicted family history, Roque sits on the fence between El Salvador and the US where his people are torn apart by organised criminals and recruitment officers alike. In a desperate attempt to smuggle his deported uncle back into the country, he travels through Guatemala and Mexico while his half-brother, an ex-marine as scarred as Iraq, organises the funds necessary to safeguard their passage home. Soon Roque is entrusted with the fate of a girl as beautiful as tragedy herself, and betrayal becomes the price of survival. Worse still, no one seems too certain about the Palestinian refugee in their midst, and once his guarantor turns FBI informant, borders are crossed with every loss of faith in those who promised protection and a way home.

Why is David Corbett the next big American novelist? Because he knows what he’s doing. At a time when most men of letters think they owe it to themselves to be easily bruised, Corbett knows he owes it to his readers to be unique, understanding, and unafraid. Setting his sights on a world beyond his own is not colonial complacency but simple strength. He lets us see unfamiliar places and perspectives with the same humble sensitivity with which he lets us see our shared violence and suffering. He is at home in life, and even in his darkest moments he shows us the difference between imitation feeling and the real thing, the stuff that will singe your soul or make you wish you had one.

Yes, David Corbett knows what he’s doing when he shows us sentimentality and cynicism as two sides of one nature, when he makes us wonder just how honest we want him to be, not only about his protagonists, but about ourselves. That, after all, is the measure of how much a novel can change your life. So when you find your own answer to Do They Know I’m Running?, the world might not be a better place, but you will certainly be a better reader; one who has found a way out of hell and the wisdom to know it is paved with perseverance.

For whom do you write?

The actor Joseph Chaiken suggested to his fellow actors that they mentally put a specific person in the audience each night, someone who touches them deeply and inspires them. He always put Dr. Martin Luther King in the audience. I’ve not narrowed it down quite that much, i.e., to a single person.

I write for the readers who’ve responded generously to my previous work, and a handful of writers I admire, trying to live up to their example (I’d prefer not to say who they are). And I write for my late wife, who contributed so much to my first book, which was purchased just prior to her death. If I remain true to her advice on that book – which I might have heeded more conscientiously, to be honest – I think I’ll do okay.

Bitter, cynical, jaundiced, self-aware, steadfast in their purpose, graceful under ultimate pressure – do your heroes remain heroes?

I’m not sure my protagonists are bitter or cynical or jaundiced (at least not in the medical sense in the last case). Hardened, sadder but wiser, sure. But the key, as you so kindly point out, is that they remain steadfast in their purpose, usually out of love. And for that reason, yes, despite their many flaws, they remain heroes, albeit all too human ones.

I believe that we are best when we remain true to the noble simplicities of our heart – loyalty, empathy, courage – as long as we are honest with ourselves about them. The honesty is the hard part, for we are intrinsically fallible and prone to self-delusion and denial, usually due to a deep-seated need to cling to some illusion out of dread – dread of feeling too deeply the terror of our solitude, for example, which can seem like a living death.

The serpent in the garden is fear, which corrupts honesty and love. All my books could be seen as variations on that theme.

Before one can annihilate the world, one must first write it into being. Is that what you do?

Not that I know of. “No worlds were annihilated in the writing of this novel”: perhaps I should add that before each book.

Seriously, I try to create a fictional world that mirrors the real one, a kind of thought experiment except it’s not just the mind but the heart I hope to engage. I pose a hypothetical situation by which the reader can imagine the possibility of living through the events I portray, and being faced with the moral choices the action presents. Through that, I hope to expand the reader’s sense of the world, perhaps tap a little deeper into her well of compassion, understanding and insight.

Mostly, I hope I can seduce them into feeling something for my characters. If I’ve done that, I’ve written well.

Do you think a bourgeois appetite for dirty adventure explains the popular success of crime fiction?

Oh, why pick on the bourgeoisie? I think the appeal of depicting crime in fiction is the opportunity to glance into the shadows of the soul. We all suspect we know what we’ll find there, but propriety forbids our indulging the glance too wholeheartedly. And crime is just the dark end of individualism, where all sense of the common good is cast aside – sometimes out of desperation, sometimes out of sadistic obsession, sometimes out of a sociopathic narcissism.

We all can imagine ourselves being thrust into that end of things, as victims or perpetrators, or venturing there out of sheer perverse pleasure. Crime in a novel or film allows us to do that without creating actual harm. If indulged unwisely I suppose one could consider it a pornography of violence, but that’s why I emphasize my characters and try to elicit empathy for their plight.

Would you agree that what most defines the genre are not its formal conventions, but rather the epic perseverance of its protagonists in a world where there is no healing, only constant movement towards it – is CF stoicism with a fancy for spectacle?

I think any genre per se is defined by its subject matter, not its conventions. The conventions are not ironclad rules but just typical devices – approaches – that provide a set of reliable expectations for the reader (and publishing house marketing departments). How far you can bend or stray from those conventions before falling outside the genre seems to me a pointless question. The point is to realize one’s own artistic vision; let others worry about where you fall on the bookstore shelf. That may be seen by some as naive, but I wouldn’t be surprised if such people consider craft the pinnacle of art.

Does CF have a particular fondness for stoic heroes?

No more than war fiction – which would seem to have the edge on spectacle. I had a conversation a few years ago with an editor from a major publishing house – a man who shall remain nameless – in which he talked about those writers who, in his estimation, do or do not “respect the genre.” In his opinion, Jim Patterson and Mike Connelly are clear-cut examples of writers who do, indeed, respect the genre, and their followings (or more to the point, their numbers) demonstrated that fact. In contrast, two writers who do not respect the genre, as far as this gentleman was concerned, are George Pelecanos and Walter Mosley: “Neither one of them have sales anywhere near what their reputations would suggest,” he said, trying to justify himself. Then, even more poignantly: “If you slap the words “race riot” on the back of a book, don’t expect it to fly off the shelves.”

Now, you may infer from this, as I did, that this particular editor was confusing respecting the genre with respecting the bottom line. And I have to admit, having as I do a great admiration for both Mosley and Pelecanos, I felt a bit protective, which is a polite way to say I got pissed off. I thought this editor was slamming two first-rate and one-of-a-kind writers for being innovative – for not just taking the genre as an ironclad set of conventions, but trying to expand it by making their own distinctive contributions.

I think you have to respect a genre to want to contribute to it meaningfully, whether by “expanding” it or “transcending” it or adhering to its most “conventional” conventions. No one before Ed McBain had an entire precinct’s detective squad as a series protagonist; no one before Robert B. Parker gave his PI protagonist an explicit “code and a quest,” or a long-term love interest; James Lee Burke and James Crumley expanded the genre’s taste for regionalism and literary prose style. Claiming any of these writers didn’t respect the genre is laughable – all of which is just to say that today’s experimentations routinely become tomorrow’s conventions.

Some have argued that modern life is post-tragic. There is no space left for the tragic hero. Do you write to locate a land of adventure where we can find it, a place beyond laws in the known world, where human nature can turn to savagery and heroism?

I don’t buy the post-tragic argument. Tragedy is nothing but the dramatization of how man’s own nature betrays his self-idealization – how his realities undermine his illusions. That’s as applicable, relevant and necessary now as it ever was.

The only reason we’re in a post-tragic anything is because, since Jaws and Star Wars slammed the door forever on the neo-noir experimentations of late 1960s and early 1970s cinema, there has been an active determination on the part of Hollywood to avoid the “downer” ending. Death on the screen (for anyone but the villain(s) after Act 2) means death at the box office.

Does the genre writer sit at the table of literature like a transvestite cousin at a family gathering – does political correctness invite and pardon him while his fabulous hat is studiously ignored?

To the extent genre fiction is indulged, it is because of the size of its audience, which can’t be ignored. Occasionally, even smart readers don’t want medicine, they want candy. That doesn’t mean they want sugary crap. Or, as a friend once put it: There’s nothing wrong with entertainment, just entertainment that insults your intelligence.

Genre fiction loses its prestige in direct proportion to the degree it is formulaic. The prime virtues of crime fiction specifically – concision, narrative drive, the depiction of the darker sides of human nature – are by no means restricted to it. But snobs always need something to look down on. Genre fiction will be their punching bag for the foreseeable future. And sometimes, genre fiction will deserve what it gets.

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© 2012 The Crime of it All Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha