Few thrillers make me reflective. S.A. Cosby’s book, King of Ashes, left me thinking about the meaning of life.
Unlike many American thrillers where the bodies of the bad guys are strewn throughout the book with never a thought or comment that they were real people with families, Cosby addresses the issue through the good guy, Roman Carruthers.
On Roman’s scheme to free himself and his family from the Black Baron Boys:
He knew he couldn’t enact his plan against Torrent and Tranquil with no one getting hurt. Blood had already been spilled. But the only people who were missing Getty were the police. No one was shedding tears for Splodie except maybe a mother who lied to herself about who and what her son was, or a father who pretended he didn’t know his son was an orphan maker and a widow-creator.
Roman justifies their deaths because their lives were bad. He values lives by whether they lived bad lives and by who cared about them when they were alive.
Cosby is not willing to justify a good guy killing just by the character killed being bad. The character also needs to have no one who will miss the character. I do admire him for recognizing the bad characters are actually people.
It is a variation on Harry Bosch’s mantra:
Everybody counts or nobody counts.
Here it is:
Somebody counts sometimes.
Roman is driven to torture and kill to save the lives of himself and his family and their lifestyle. He justifies his actions as needed to protect his family. I understand why he is unwilling to rely on corrupt local authorities. Still he chooses neither to go to federal authorities nor have himself and his family leave Jefferson Run.
When the killing and torture extend to someone who is collateral damage I struggled to accept Roman’s reasoning. How many non-bad people deaths are excessive?
Roman knows he is rationalizing his evil actions.
I have written that every life has value.
In posts on Louise Penny’s book The Madness of Crowds I rejected the philosophy of statistician Abigail Robinson who valued “people” as a group but was willing to cull individuals who were not of value to the people because of disability, illness or age.
I disagree that the bad guys should forfeit life or be tortured for being bad and unmissable. They should be punished and removed from society to prison.
On what to do when the Rule of Law has broken down is harder and I consider the situation different where self-defence requires taking life.
Killing prevents the possibility of redemption but forgiveness will never fit into a rationale for killing.
Torture is beyond self-defence.
What creeps up on Roman is that once you consider some lives meaningless, killing and then torturing for reasons other than actual self-defence gets easier and easier. For targets who are bad their lives become of no consequence. It matters less and less if they have families.
Roman loses his soul in the carnage and the vivid cover is emblematic of “everything burns”.
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Cosby, S.A. - (2022) - Razorblade Tears and Who is S.A. Cosby?; (2024) - All the Sinners Bleed; (2026) King of Ashes







