Crossers
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
When Gil Castle loses his wife, he retreats to his family’s sprawling homestead out west, a forsaken part of the country where drug lords have more power than police. Here Castle begins to rebuild his life, even as he uncovers some dark truths about his fearsome grandfather. When a Mexican illegal shows up at the ranch, terrified after a border-crossing drug deal gone bad, Castle agrees to take him in. Yet his act of generosity sets off a flood of violence and vengeance, a fierce reminder that we never truly escape our history. Spanning three generations of an Arizona family, Crossers is a blistering novel about the brutality and beauty of life on the border.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The fallout between public and private distinctions of war is just one of the border disputes haunting Pulitzer-winner Caputo's gorgeously stark latest. Inconsolable after the loss of his wife on 9/11, Gil Castle leaves New York for his family's Arizona ranch, San Ignacio, overlooking the Mexican border. But San Ignacio proves to be "a pretty place where some ugly things happen," and Gil's discovery of a Mexican illegal, left for dead after a border-crossing deal gone awry, soon merges "the world of cattle and horses and operatic landscapes" with the "world of drug lords and coyotes and murder," whose cast of femmes fatale and tough muchachos includes the Professor an "agent of history" working both sides of the border and at least two sides of the law and Yvonne Men ndez, the ruthless leader of the Agua Prieta cartel, whose past may be painfully entwined with Gil's family history. That history is broadly personified in Gil's larger-than-life grandfather Ben Erskine, a legendary deputy sheriff whose adventures emerge in inter-chapter accounts. At first glance, this multifarious book skirts country familiar to readers of McCarthy or McMurtry, but Caputo's west supersedes elemental cowboys and lone justice with the malaise of post-9/11 America and the violence of the Mexican desert as gruesome as in Iraq frothing with moral ambiguity and fraught with complicity.
Customer Reviews
Great READ!!!
Author does a great job getting you emotionally invested in the characters. The story flows very well if you can get used to the random flashback stories on family members in the early 1900's.