David Corbett was a private investigator who played a significant role in a number of high-profile cases before publishing his first novel, The Devil’s Redhead, in 2002. He has written four other novels, including Done for a Dime, a New York Times Notable Book, and The Mercy of the Night (2015), as well as a work of nonfiction, The Art of Character, and numerous short stories, two of which have been included in The Best American Mystery Stories. Corbett lives in Vallejo, California.

Go Humbly

Notes on Writing

by David Corbett

What right does an American mutt like me have to depict in fiction the lives of a Salvadoran family?

Maybe this question no longer resonates, now that the era of identity politics has waned. As I rolled it around in my head, though, preparing to write this sidebar, the film Osama came to mind, about an Afghan girl who, after the Taliban takeover, masquerades as a boy to find work and help her mother survive. The scenes with the girl are often excruciatingly brutal and tragic. The film ends with her being discovered, sold off to a sadistic old man with a harem of bitter imprisoned wives. But the image that has always haunted me was fleeting in the film: a Western woman, red-haired and blue-eyed like my mother, respectfully veiled but dragged off by bearded zealot thugs, an unmistakable look of controlled terror on her face. Later, in another fleeting glimpse, shot from a distance amid chaos, we see her buried up to her neck, about to be stoned to death.

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