The Sisters Brothers
I laughed out loud; I gasped; I got a little choked up; what more can one ask for when looking for a good story?
While I hadn't read any reviews of Patrick DeWitt's The Sisters Brothers, I did see the title on the "short list" for the Man Booker prize and when I clicked on it, I liked the Man Booker write-up on it: "...a darkly funny, offbeat western about a reluctant assassin and his murderous brother." Westerns aren't usually my first choice (although I have enjoyed a few before), but this sounded like a great piece of "cowboy noir."
The story takes place in Oregon, 1851; the brothers have been given an assassination assignment that takes them on their first trip into California: the peculiar and disturbing land of gold prospectors that have been in the wild way too long, corrupt "bosses" and sad ladies of the evening.
DeWitt has a fabulous ear for dialogue and I thoroughly enjoyed the weirdly funny, meditative conversations Eli and Charlie Sisters engage in on their journey. They speak in an oddly formal way that is reminiscent of the writing in HBO's western series "Deadwood" a few years back. In one exchange, the brothers have been arguing about whether or not Eli should get a new horse:
"The point of my argument is that you were only keen on Tub's departure when it suited you financially."
"So I am a drunkard AND a miser? ... A drunken miser. There is my sorry fate."
"You are a contrarian."
He lurched as if hit by a bullet. 'A drunken, miserly contrarian!' The heat of his vicious words."
I don't feel like I'm really doing The Sisters Brothers justice; there were so many sardonic one-liners exchanged between the brothers on a regular basis that need the context of the novel to be appreciated and enjoyed. Their references to their shared childhood are few but nevertheless give insight into their adult relationship. "Mother" seems to have been a particularly peculiar character!
The Sisters Brothers are hired killers and there are more than a couple violent and casual killings along the way. Eli, always the more reluctant murderer, begins to have very serious thoughts about stopping this way of life and puts forth his arguments to Charlie. The brothers discuss the "two futures, the immediate and the distant." How they finally arrive at their decision and what brings them to it makes for very riveting reading.
I thought The Sisters Brothers was an extremely creative piece of writing; original and engaging. I'm planning on reading an earlier novel of DeWitt's: Ablutions. This guy is good!!