THE SITE FOR DIE HARD CRIME & THRILLER FANS
Features

First Look: Backwater by James Sallis

2 Mins read
Backwater by James Sallis photo of front cover

In January 2025, the crime fiction world lost one of its greats with the passing of the American author James Sallis. However, when he passed away of pneumonia aged 81, the author left behind one last manuscript – Backwater – and it’s coming out in September 2026.

Today on our YouTube channel, Video Evidence, we preview that novel and pay tribute to James Sallis, whose work was riveting and tyre screeching, like his big hit, Drive; noir-tinted and mysterious, like his Lew Archer novels; but also poetic and philosophical like The Killer is Dying and Others of My Kind.

Backwater takes place in the American South, in a fictional town which has been a backwater ever since its ferry stopped working in way-back-when. It’s not a stretch to say the setting is based on the area where Sallis grew up, in Helena, Arkansas, on the banks of the Mississippi.

Bishop, a retired cop, is feeding his muse by playing jazz guitar when Carson, an old friend from the force asks him to help out with a case the next state over. A late model Honda has been found near an old gas station, its interior covered in blood, but there’s no body. Bishop had a reputation working homicides, so Carson ropes him in but there are two tricky aspects that give him pause early on.

Pre-order your copy here.

Backwater by James Sallis advance reading copy three quarter photo
Foreword to Backwater by James Sallis

Firstly, it means Bishop has to return to the town where he grew up. Secondly, when he shows up to help the local police, Carson has already disappeared.

What’s struck me reading the first few chapters of the advance reading copy of Backwater is its sense of nostalgia. Of course that’s to be expected in a homecoming story, and there are his memories of growing up. But Bishop also recalls old cases he worked on, bands he used to play with, records he loved and books he used to read. It’s kind of neat that this character was drawn to solving murders by reading Conan Doyle, Josephine Tey and John Dickson Carr, among others.

If you liked the Lew Archer mysteries and Sallis’s more philosophical reads, which go deep into the human condition, this is somewhere in between the two. I didn’t realise it at the time of recording the video, but this book also has strong Southern Gothic tones, with its setting, dark memories from the past and dark deeds in the present. It’s gentle, sensitive and textured, with a shadow that spreads across it.

We’ll be bringing you a full review in due course.

Watch for Backwater, out 1 September from Soho Crime, by James Sallis – rest in peace.

Backwater photo of back cover


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related posts
KindlePrintReviews

Solitary Agents by David Goodman

David Goodman’s A Reluctant Spy was widely acclaimed upon release in 2025, the Legends programme at its heart a clever twist on spy fiction and something the CIA themselves have commented on. The programme sees everyday civilians trade their identities with agents and live a…
iBookKindlePrintReviews

She Walks at Night by Seishi Yokomizo

Translated by Jesse Kirkwood — She Walks at Night by Seishi Yokomizo (1902-1981) is a wonderfully strange blend of Golden Age puzzle mystery, Gothic melodrama and distinctly Japanese atmosphere. Originally published as Woman Walking at Night in Japan, in 1948, it’s another perplexing case for…
iBookKindlePrintReviews

A Deadly Episode by Anthony Horowitz

There’s something delightfully audacious about the premise of A Deadly Episode. The latest instalment in Anthony Horowitz’s long-running Hawthorne series begins with a murder that appears, at first glance anyway, to be deeply personal: private detective Daniel Hawthorne is stabbed to death. Except he isn’t….
Crime Fiction Lover