Death follows in the wake of two brothers headed to California to kill a man for their employer, a wealthy man known as “The Commodore.”
In The Sisters Brothers, Patrick DeWitt has done a 180 from his first novel Ablutions, a dark, grim story about the denizens of a seedy Hollywood bar. His new book is a darkly comic Western noir that serves notice with its whimsical title that DeWitt’s west is not the same place as the west you’ll find in a Louis L’Amour novel.
There is a lot to like here. The story is episodic and reminiscent in some ways of Little Big Man, only taking place in a more focused context. Eli and Charlie Sisters seem to run across a whole cross-section of Western types (the diligent Chinese house boy, the luckless prospectors, the soiled doves and so forth) that Larry McMurtry (Lonesome Dove) would recognize. There’s also a tinge of superstition and the paranormal (the weird gypsy) that unsettles us a bit. What the story mostly reminds us of is a graphic novel, even though this is a fully fleshed tale that doesn’t need illustrations.
First of all, the dialogue is absolutely great. Eli’s horse-trading when he sells the Indian horse that simply walks up to him is reminiscent of Mattie’s dickering in True Grit, and there are other places where we suspect the writer might have been influenced by the Charles Portis novel, if not the movie(s) of the same name.