Zoot-Suit Murders

Zoot-Suit Murders

About the Book

Like his lavishly praised novels Rabbit Boss and Mile Zero, Thomas Sanchez's Zoot-Suit Murders combines a tautly arched narrative with fiercely visual prose and a starkly revisionist view of the American melting pot.
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Praise for Zoot-Suit Murders

"Powerful fiction...a vivid tale of political intrigue and romance by a master of pictorial detail." -- Chicago Tribune

"Zoot-Suit Murders matches the best of the war novels in its execution, and may be the best of the home-front novels of World War II....The novel alternates between intimacy and sweep, a cinematic quality similar to that of Chinatown, an excellent, near-Hitchcockian technique." -- Robert Kirsch, Los Angeles Times

"A deeply political book told in hauntingly lyrical prose." --Washington Post Book World

"A master writer." --Vanity Fair

"Haunting ... Sanchez is a writer of sensitivity and power."--Boston Globe

"The no-nonsense tension present in the best of thrillers...Sanchez brings the novel to an unexpected and shocking climax."--Publishers Weekly

"[Sanchez is] a writer of enourmous gifts." --Cleveland Plain Dealer 
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About the Author

Thomas Sanchez

Thomas Sanchez, fifth generation Californian born days before his father was killed in World War II. Sent as a boy to orphanage/boarding school with Native, Black, White and Latino Americans. In the 1960s participated in iconic events -- Farm Workers Strikes, tumultuous U.C. Berkeley Free Speech Protest, counter-culture explosion of San
Francisco Haight-Ashbury. In the 1970s ran strategic supplies through Government armed forces with shoot-to-kill orders surrounding Indians under siege in Wounded Knee, South Dakota, site of the infamous 1890s massacre.
 
Sanchez lived seven years below the poverty line while dedicated to writing the generational epic, Rabbit Boss. The novel is listed by State Librarian of California Emeritus, Kevin Starr, as "one of the three or four finest novels ever to be set in California" and cited as "etched in unforgettable prose" by Native American Historian Vine Deloria, Standing Rock Sioux author of, "Custer Died For Your Sins". In the 1980s civil wars in Guatemala and El Salvador Sanchez traversed political and jungle landscapes with guerrilla fighters, CIA spooks and war journalists. In the 1990s Sanchez was the only American novelist to interview in Havana, Mario Morales Mesa, famed Cuban revolutionary fighter and head of the Narcotics and Gangster Bureaus.
 
Awarded grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, knighted as Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French Republic, recipient of the first annual California Classics Litquake Barbaray Coast Award.

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