Harlots' Sauce Radio Podcast
"For Love and Crime" an interview with author David Corbett
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The first word that comes to my mind to describe David
Corbett is, “depth.” That shows through in his writing and in the
man himself.
A reader will get the sense from his descriptions of complex characters in
his three crime drama novels, The Devil’s Redhead, Done for a Dime, and
Blood of Paradise, that he isn’t just telling stories ─ somehow he knows
that the gradations between what makes a human being a law-abiding
citizen, a convict, or a villain, can be very thin.
And know that, he does. Because for a decade and a half, Mr. Corbett
worked for a private investigative firm, taking part in many drug, murder,
and fraud litigations, including The Cotton Club Murder Case, The
People's Temple Trial, the first Michael Jackson child molestation case,
and a RICO civil litigation brought by the Teamsters against former union
leaders associated with organized crime.
One would think that having slogged about in the muck of the crime world
for fifteen years, in the same way the characters in his novels slog about
in assorted crack dealings, arsons, assassinations and gruesome murders
throughout Las Vegas, El Salvador, San Francisco and more, should have
made David cold and cynical. But it hasn’t. Mr. Corbett, in his writing,
let’s us know that all of us are capable of committing crime, but he is
keenly aware of what qualities it takes inside us to ignore those urges,
or to fulfill them. Nonetheless, he writes with a unexpected caring about
the misguided, the foolhardy, and the self-destructive. And because he is
so clearly concerned for them, his readers are, too.
When interviewing David Corbett, after having met him at a Mystery Writers Conference at Book Passage in Corte Madera,
California, I thought that perhaps his depth of character grew off the fact that he was one half of the whole of a very poignant love
story. David’s wife, Terri, died of ovarian cancer only a little more than a month after his first novel was sold.
Of her, David wrote:
“[My first novel] The Devil’s Redhead would not exist if not for Terri's continuous devotion, encouragement, editorial advice and
technical assistance. The sight of her bundled up in our lamp-lit bed, surrounded by the dogs as she pored through the manuscript,
making her notations—I'll treasure that memory long after any praise the book garners fades away. Her ear for pacing, her contempt
for pretense, her big strong heart, her constant reminders to, "tell the love story"... they resonate on every page. It feels like a curse,
the fact that the book now has a place in this world, but she does not.”
Naturally, David dedicated The Devil’s Redhead to Terri. But, he’s done more than that for his wife---he has immortalized her in his
essay of her life, Cesidia and in the love story of wildcat smuggler, Dan Abatangelo and his redhead, Shel Beaudry, a woman who, to
my mind, bears a remarkable resemblance, in many ways, to the very complex and compassionate woman who was David’s beloved
wife, Cesidia Therese "Terri" Tessicini.
Having never been an avid reader of 'crime drama,' I read The Devil’s Redhead to prepare for this interview. But when I was through
with that, I picked up Done for a Dime and Blood of Paradise, and read both of those, as well. I recommend all three.
David’s fun to talk, too. Trust me, baby, it’s not going feel like you’re in for ‘a hard ten,’ when you listen to the author of
The Devil’s Redhead, get interviewed by me, "The Italian Brunette."
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David's Books:
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"Dazzling...
...Seductive..."
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