Emlyn had a bad streak.

She was well aware of it and kept it contained. Others might yearn to be the hero and save the world or save the baby. Emlyn yearned to be a brilliant thief.


Another excellent example of Cooney's trademark "take a cliche or uninspired or easy-to-do-badly premise and make it much better than it needs to be." In this case, the actual premise is "high school students steal a mummy from a museum as a prank," but I strongly suspect that her publisher just asked for a thriller called Mummy and a cover with a mummy.

I will note up-front, since I forlornly held out hope for quite some time that the mummy would rise at some point, that the mummy does not rise. There are some very borderline maybe-fantasy elements in which Emlyn may get some glimpses of life in ancient Egypt, but she might just have a vivid imagination.

Mummy is a heist novel with a noir sensibility. About one-third of it is the theft of the mummy, a beautifully worked out sequence of nailbiting suspense, and there's several other, shorter, heist-style action sequences that are also very well-done. But Cooney doesn't settle for just writing a heist novel where the characters are modern teenagers who don't do anything real teenagers couldn't do - which is an unusual and impressive feat by itself.

There's also Emlyn, the protagonist. She's a fascinating, unusual protagonist, very competent and smart in some ways but with some very big blind spots. She loves the idea of stealing and lying and elaborate plots, but for all her criminal ambitions, she's one of the few characters in the book with an actual moral compass. Because she wants to have illegal adventures, she's thought a lot about morality and takes the idea of good and bad seriously; she thinks she's the clever villain, but she has a tragically naive idea of what badness is. She's been so focused on her own potential for wrongdoing that she's completely forgotten that other people might want to do bad things too, and, unlike her, might not care at all that they're wrong...

The book melds a heist novel with the sort of coming of age story that's largely about disillusionment with a character study. It also takes the idea of mummies and goes in possibly the most unexpected direction with it, focusing largely on issues of respect and disrespect for the dead. When it turns out that society really hasn't moved on from tomb-robbing and destroying priceless artifacts for money and cheap thrills, the focus is less on the value of history than on respect for the actual person that artifact once was.

It was only ten and it was already as hot as hell. When he stepped off the porch, he could feel the sun beating down on him like he owed it money.

Blacktop Wasteland deserves all the praise it got and then some. It marries classic noir prose and plot to a Black protagonist in a southern milieu, a heartbreaking story of fathers and sons, social commentary, and jaw-dropping action sequences featuring some very imaginative things you can do with motor vehicles.

Beauregard “Bug” Montage used to be a getaway driver, just like his long-gone father. But now he's gone straight, supporting his wife and two sons as a car mechanic, his only remnant of the life his father's beloved car and a feeling in the back of his soul that he was always meant to be be a criminal.

A series of unfortunate events lands him in the hole, and his past gets him an offer of some quick cash if he'll just be a getaway driver one more time. However, the people he needs to work with are less than impressive:

The last thing Ronnie remembered was one of the girls sucking his dick like she'd been poisoned and the antidote was in his nuts.

And also prone to double-crossing:

"He so crooked they gonna have to screw him into the ground when he dies," Boonie said.

The robbery goes very wrong, leaving Beauregard with no good options other than pulling off a truly spectacular heist.

The general thrust of the plot is very classic noir, but the individual twists and turns, and particularly some of the action sequences, are startling and original. It has a plot as meticulously constructed as a master carpenter might make a chair, but everything is motivated by in-character decisions and plausible twists of fate, so it feels completely organic.

The prose is something you luxuriate in, and Beauregard's downward spiral is heartbreaking. It's an excellent book on every level, and I highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys noir.

Content notes: violence, drugs, non-graphic child harm, depictions of racism and homophobia.

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