Sebastian Rotella's Blog, page 4
June 26, 2018
LA Review of Books
An epistolary conversation about Rip Crew, fiction, journalism, migration and other obsessions with the great Ivy Pochoda, the author of Wonder Valley, a remarkable novel about Southern California.
https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/r...
https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/r...
Published on June 26, 2018 14:52
June 23, 2018
Cut Time!
In a display of discerning and exquisite taste, Gordon Marino of The Wall Street Journal names his top five sports books. Among them:
Cut Time: An Education at the Fights, by Carlo Rotella!
I recommend it highly.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/gordon-m....
Cut Time: An Education at the Fights, by Carlo Rotella!
I recommend it highly.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/gordon-m....
Published on June 23, 2018 07:27
June 15, 2018
The website lives.
Published on June 15, 2018 16:49
June 3, 2018
Rip Crew in French
My dear friends at Liana Levi in Paris have published Rip Crew under the title Trafiquants & Associés. A fine translation as always. Voilà:
http://www.lianalevi.fr/f/index.php?s...
http://www.lianalevi.fr/f/index.php?s...
Published on June 03, 2018 13:08
May 31, 2018
Mystery Scene review
Published on May 31, 2018 06:54
May 3, 2018
Authors Voice interview in Chicago, my kind of town. Solved!, with Libby Fischer Hellman.
Published on May 03, 2018 09:46
April 19, 2018
Speaking of Mysteries with Nancie Claire
Published on April 19, 2018 10:51
April 3, 2018
Open Letters Review
Rip Crew by Sebastian Rotella
March 31, 2018 Steve Donoghue
Rip Crew
by Sebastian Rotella
Mulholland Books, 2017
The crime that kicks off Sebastian Rotella's lightning-bolt new thriller Rip Crew is a thing of multifold darkness: ten women, all illegal migrants from Somalia, Ethiopia, and Eritrea, are being smuggled across the US border at San Diego when they're abducted by a “rip crew” aiming to scalp the profits in human trafficking they represent. The rip crew – and the women – are then found dead in a hotel room back across the border. It's a story taken from the world of illegal immigration Rotella came to know intimately during his time reporting on US-Mexican border issues (some of which is recounted in his gripping 1998 nonfiction book Twilight on the Line), rendered all the more tragically topical in light of the anti-immigration hysteria stirred up by the 2016 US Presidential election.
In Rotella's novel, sexy hero Valentine Pescatore is tasked by a powerful Homeland Security executive (and his former lover, of course) with looking into what happened and who was responsible, despite the brutal simplicity of the end results (“That's what rip crews are like. Worse than narcos, worse than human smugglers. Pure predators”). Pescatore, a lean, efficient fighter with a passionate nature, agrees to take the case after looking at the desolating evidence:
The photos from the crime scene were not especially bloody or lurid. Not sadism, just extermination. The scene was a dingy motel room. The women had been lined up and mowed down. Corpses were crumpled on a frayed brown carpet, slumped against walls, sprawled across a bed whose cover was decorated with images of tropical birds.
And once the hero is involved, a crew of fellow heroes is quickly assembled, including the novel's best-realized character, journalist and family man Leo Méndez, “morbid by nature, nationality, and profession.” And as readers of this kind of high-octane action-thriller will be able to predict, the investigation steadily darkens and complicates into something neither Pescatore nor his employer could have imagined.
Rotella is a virtuoso of action-writing, which is no small distinction given how easy such writing is to bungle, and that alone makes Rip Crew a fantastic read. But this author is also a fine observer of small details, with an extremely sensitive ear for narrative tension, and his attention to rounding and fleshing out even his minor characters never lags and is never heavy-handed. The ultimate eee-vil reveal is a touch on the guessable side, but the whole thing is pulled off with such unblinking conviction that readers will find it completely irresistible. And they'll read the book's last page really hoping to read another Pescatore/Méndez adventure.
Steve Donoghue was a founding editor of Open Letters Monthly. His book criticism has appeared in the Boston Globe, the Wall Street Journal, and the American Conservative. He writes regularly for the National, the Washington Post, the Vineyard Gazette, and the Christian Science Monitor. His website is http://www.stevedonoghue.com.
March 31, 2018 Steve Donoghue
Rip Crew
by Sebastian Rotella
Mulholland Books, 2017
The crime that kicks off Sebastian Rotella's lightning-bolt new thriller Rip Crew is a thing of multifold darkness: ten women, all illegal migrants from Somalia, Ethiopia, and Eritrea, are being smuggled across the US border at San Diego when they're abducted by a “rip crew” aiming to scalp the profits in human trafficking they represent. The rip crew – and the women – are then found dead in a hotel room back across the border. It's a story taken from the world of illegal immigration Rotella came to know intimately during his time reporting on US-Mexican border issues (some of which is recounted in his gripping 1998 nonfiction book Twilight on the Line), rendered all the more tragically topical in light of the anti-immigration hysteria stirred up by the 2016 US Presidential election.
In Rotella's novel, sexy hero Valentine Pescatore is tasked by a powerful Homeland Security executive (and his former lover, of course) with looking into what happened and who was responsible, despite the brutal simplicity of the end results (“That's what rip crews are like. Worse than narcos, worse than human smugglers. Pure predators”). Pescatore, a lean, efficient fighter with a passionate nature, agrees to take the case after looking at the desolating evidence:
The photos from the crime scene were not especially bloody or lurid. Not sadism, just extermination. The scene was a dingy motel room. The women had been lined up and mowed down. Corpses were crumpled on a frayed brown carpet, slumped against walls, sprawled across a bed whose cover was decorated with images of tropical birds.
And once the hero is involved, a crew of fellow heroes is quickly assembled, including the novel's best-realized character, journalist and family man Leo Méndez, “morbid by nature, nationality, and profession.” And as readers of this kind of high-octane action-thriller will be able to predict, the investigation steadily darkens and complicates into something neither Pescatore nor his employer could have imagined.
Rotella is a virtuoso of action-writing, which is no small distinction given how easy such writing is to bungle, and that alone makes Rip Crew a fantastic read. But this author is also a fine observer of small details, with an extremely sensitive ear for narrative tension, and his attention to rounding and fleshing out even his minor characters never lags and is never heavy-handed. The ultimate eee-vil reveal is a touch on the guessable side, but the whole thing is pulled off with such unblinking conviction that readers will find it completely irresistible. And they'll read the book's last page really hoping to read another Pescatore/Méndez adventure.
Steve Donoghue was a founding editor of Open Letters Monthly. His book criticism has appeared in the Boston Globe, the Wall Street Journal, and the American Conservative. He writes regularly for the National, the Washington Post, the Vineyard Gazette, and the Christian Science Monitor. His website is http://www.stevedonoghue.com.
Published on April 03, 2018 15:58
March 14, 2018
Notes from Sebastian
Sebastian Rotella interview with Crime Elements (Thanks much, John Valeri) about Rip Crew.
https://www.criminalelement.com/Sebas...
https://www.criminalelement.com/Sebas...
Published on March 14, 2018 13:16