Razorblade Tears is an action packed,
hard-edged thriller. It’s violent and sometimes disturbing, but it’s also a
well written tale of redemption –if you want to view it that way. Because, at
times, it was hard to get past some of the “bury your gay” themes (and dumbness
of trans character believing that even though she’s treated like shit by her
secret lover, she somehow believes that he loves her), especially in horrible ways both
Isiah and Derek were murdered (and why they’re killed in such a graphic way).
And so you have two homophobic ex-con fathers who only learn “love is love”
after their kids are dead and buried. This sort of moralizing becomes tedious
after a while, if only because Ike and Buddy Lee are looking for vengeance when
they should’ve searched in their hearts for the love they claimed they had for
their boys. I mean, both claimed multiple times that they loved them, but both never
stopped to ponder what the word meant until it’s too late.
Absolution cannot be handed
out like Halloween candy, and it would’ve been great to explore not only Isiah’s
and Derek’s love for each other (a triumph of two people who had horrible young
lives only to find each other and become successful husbands and fathers
themselves), but the women as well –as they’re shortchanged here. But we know
where this tale is going to end once Buddy Lee and Ike agree to handle the job
the police don’t seem interested in; which I also found interesting. At times
it felt like a subplot about why the police are not really investigating the
boy’s death was left out. On one hand, you can think that it’s stereotype of cops
not caring about a gay couple, but their murders were so violent, so horrible
that you can easily see there was more to their deaths. It seems so weird no
one on the police force felt really compelled to solve it. So was a subplot taken
out or did Cosby not think of it? Also, in the end, it was not too difficult
for the men to piece all the puzzle parts together.
So I’m of two minds here, as I was entertained by this book, but felt that Ike and Buddy Lee’s realization that they did love their gay kids, who were married and had a surrogate daughter, came a little too easily, it was too pat. And the less I mention the convenience and coincidence of the ending, the better I’ll feel. Still, I won’t say don’t read Razorblade Tears, because it is well done, but I did feel a bit icky about some of the themes that S.A. Cosby was foisting upon the reader.
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